Massive Immune Hemolysis Caused by Anti-D After Dual Kidney Transplantation |
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Authors: | Gregory J. Pomper Rita A. Joseph Erica L. Hartmann Michael S. Rohr Patricia L. Adams Robert J. Stratta |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pathology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine and North Carolina Baptist Hospital, Winston-Salem, NC, USA. gpomper@wfubmc.edu |
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Abstract: | Massive immune hemolysis due to passenger lymphocyte-derived anti-D has not been reported in renal transplantation. A 50-year-old (B-positive) male received a dual deceased-donor kidney transplant (B-negative) for diabetic renal failure. Two weeks post-transplant, the patient developed severe hemolytic anemia. The donor anti-D titer was 1:8. The recipient anti-D titer (zero pre-transplant) increased from 1:4 to 1:16 over 4 days. Rapid hemolysis caused severe anemia, minimum Hb = 4.2 g/dL, while selectively lysing the patient's autologous red cells during this time. The hemolytic anemia did not impair the allografts and subsided without monoclonal B-cell pharmacotherapy or apheresis. The anti-D titer decreased to barely detectable levels at four months and had cleared when checked 2 years post-transplant. Transfusion support subsided after two months. If complications of anemia can be avoided, the deleterious effects of hemolysis may be well tolerated by renal allografts using antigen negative transfusion alone. |
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Keywords: | Immune hemolysis passenger lymphocyte syndrome renal transplantation Rh(D) |
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