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1.
The Luminex test can detect low levels of donor‐specific antibody (DSA) that cannot be detected by flow‐cytometric cross‐matching (FCXM) in kidney transplantation (KT). This study evaluated the impact of DSA on clinical outcomes in KT recipients negative on FCXM. Of 575 consecutive patients who underwent living donor KT between January 2013 and July 2016, 494 (85.9%) were DSA‐negative and 81 (14.1%) were DSA‐positive. Although rates of acute cellular rejection (ACR) at 1 year were similar in the 2 groups (= .54), the incidence of antibody‐mediated rejection (ABMR) was significantly higher in the DSA‐positive group (< .01). There was no statistically significant association between rejection‐free graft survival (RFGS) rates and pretransplant class I DSA. However, evaluation of pretransplant class II DSA showed that RFGS rates were significantly lower in patients with mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) >3000 than in patients with DSA‐negative (< .01). On multivariate analyses, class II DSA MFI ≥5000 was a significant risk factor for acute rejection (hazard ratio, 7.48; P < .01). These findings suggested that pretransplant DSA alone did not affect graft survival in KT recipients without desensitization. However, class II DSA MFI >5000 was an independent predictor of acute rejection in DSA‐positive patients.  相似文献   

2.
Pretransplant risk assessment of graft failure is important for donor selection and choice of immunosuppressive treatment. We examined the relation between kidney graft failure and presence of IgG donor specific HLA antibodies (DSA) or C1q‐fixing DSA, detected by single antigen bead array (SAB) in pretransplant sera from 837 transplantations. IgG‐DSA were found in 290 (35%) sera, whereas only 30 (4%) sera had C1q‐fixing DSA. Patients with both class‐I plus ‐II DSA had a 10 yr graft survival of 30% versus 72% in patients without HLA antibodies (p < 0.001). No significant difference was observed in graft survival between patients with or without C1q‐fixing DSA. Direct comparison of both assays showed that high mean fluorescence intensity values on the pan‐IgG SAB assay are generally related to C1q‐fixation. We conclude that the presence of class‐I plus ‐II IgG DSA as detected by SAB in pretransplant sera of crossmatch negative kidney recipients is indicative for an increased risk for graft failure, whereas the clinical significance of C1q‐fixing IgG‐DSA could not be assessed due to their low prevalence.  相似文献   

3.
Clinical relevance of ELISA‐ and single‐antigen bead assay (SAB)‐detected pretransplant HLA antibodies (SAB‐HLA‐Ab) for kidney graft survival was evaluated retrospectively in 197 patients transplanted between 2002 and 2009 at the University Clinic Frankfurt. Having adjusted for retransplantation and delayed graft function, a significantly increased risk for death‐censored graft loss was found in patients with pretransplant SAB‐HLA‐Ab [HR: 4.46; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.47–13.48; P = 0.008]. The risk for increased graft loss was also significant in patients with pretransplant SAB‐HLA‐Ab but without SAB‐detected donor‐specific Ab (SAB‐DSA) (HR: 4.91; 95% CI of 1.43–16.991; P = 0.012). ELISA was not sufficient to identify pretransplant immunized patients with an increased risk for graft loss. In immunized patients, graft loss was predominantly present in patients who received transplants with a mismatch on the HLA‐DR locus. In conclusion, even if our study is limited due to small sample size, the results show an increased risk for long‐term graft loss in patients with pretransplant SAB‐HLA, even in the absence of DSA. SAB‐HLA‐Ab‐positive patients, being negative in ELISA or CDC assay, might profit from a well‐HLA‐DR‐matched graft and intensified immunosuppression.  相似文献   

4.
Various desensitization protocols were shown to enable successful living donor kidney transplantation across a positive complement‐dependent cytotoxicity crossmatch (CDCXM). Positive crossmatch transplantation, however, is less well established for deceased donor transplantation. We report a cohort of 68 deceased donor renal allograft recipients who, on the basis of broad sensitization (lymphocytotoxic panel reactivity ≥40%), were subjected to a protocol of peritransplant immunoadsorption (IA). Treatment consisted of a single session of immediate pretransplant IA (protein A) followed by posttransplant IA and antilymphocyte antibody therapy. Twenty‐one patients had a positive CDCXM, which could be rendered negative by pretransplant apheresis. Solid phase HLA antibody detection revealed preformed donor‐specific antibodies (DSA) in all 21 CDCXM‐positive and in 30 CDCXM‐negative recipients. At 5 years, overall graft survival, death‐censored graft survival and patient survival were 63%, 76% and 87%, respectively, without any differences between CDCXM‐positive, CDCXM‐negative/DSA‐positive and CDCXM‐negative/DSA‐negative recipients. Furthermore, groups did not differ regarding rates of antibody‐mediated rejection (24% vs. 30% vs. 24%, p = 0.84), cellular rejection (14% vs. 23% vs. 18%, p = 0.7) or allograft function (median 5‐year serum creatinine: 1.3 vs. 1.8 vs. 1.7 mg/dL, p = 0.62). Our results suggest that peritransplant IA is an effective strategy for rapid desensitization in deceased donor transplantation.  相似文献   

5.
Renal transplant candidates with donor‐specific alloantibody (DSA) have increased risk of antibody‐mediated allograft injury. The goal of this study was to correlate the risk of antibody‐mediated rejection (AMR), transplant glomerulopathy (TG) and graft survival with the baseline DSA level (prior to initiation of pretransplant conditioning). These analyses include 119 positive crossmatch (+XM) compared to 70 negative crossmatch (?XM) transplants performed between April 2000 and July 2007. Using a combination of cell‐based crossmatch tests, DSA level was stratified into very high +XM, high +XM, low +XM and ?XM groups. In +XM transplants, increasing DSA level was associated with increased risk for AMR (HR = 1.76 [1.51, 2.07], p = 0.0001) but not TG (p = 0.18). We found an increased risk for both early and late allograft loss associated with very high DSA (HR = 7.71 [2.95, 20.1], p = 0.0001). Although lower DSA recipients commonly developed AMR and TG, allograft survival was similar to that of ?XM patients (p = 0.31). We conclude that the baseline DSA level correlates with risk of early and late alloantibody‐mediated allograft injury. With current protocols, very high baseline DSA patients have high rates of AMR and poor long‐term allograft survival highlighting the need for improved therapy for these candidates.  相似文献   

6.
E. G. Kamburova  B. W. Wisse  I. Joosten  W. A. Allebes  A. van der Meer  L. B. Hilbrands  M. C. Baas  E. Spierings  C. E. Hack  F. E. van Reekum  A. D. van Zuilen  M. C. Verhaar  M. L. Bots  A. C. A. D. Drop  L. Plaisier  M. A. J. Seelen  J. S .F. Sanders  B. G. Hepkema  A. J. A. Lambeck  L. B. Bungener  C. Roozendaal  M. G. J. Tilanus  C. E. Voorter  L. Wieten  E. M. van Duijnhoven  M. Gelens  M. H. L. Christiaans  F. J. van Ittersum  S. A. Nurmohamed  N. M. Lardy  W. Swelsen  K. A. van der Pant  N. C. van der Weerd  I. J. M. ten Berge  F. J. Bemelman  A. Hoitsma  P. J. M. van der Boog  J. W. de Fijter  M. G. H. Betjes  S. Heidt  D. L. Roelen  F. H. Claas  H. G. Otten 《American journal of transplantation》2018,18(9):2274-2284
The presence of donor‐specific anti‐HLA antibodies (DSAs) is associated with increased risk of graft failure after kidney transplant. We hypothesized that DSAs against HLA class I, class II, or both classes indicate a different risk for graft loss between deceased and living donor transplant. In this study, we investigated the impact of pretransplant DSAs, by using single antigen bead assays, on long‐term graft survival in 3237 deceased and 1487 living donor kidney transplants with a negative complement‐dependent crossmatch. In living donor transplants, we found a limited effect on graft survival of DSAs against class I or II antigens after transplant. Class I and II DSAs combined resulted in decreased 10‐year graft survival (84% to 75%). In contrast, after deceased donor transplant, patients with class I or class II DSAs had a 10‐year graft survival of 59% and 60%, respectively, both significantly lower than the survival for patients without DSAs (76%). The combination of class I and II DSAs resulted in a 10‐year survival of 54% in deceased donor transplants. In conclusion, class I and II DSAs are a clear risk factor for graft loss in deceased donor transplants, while in living donor transplants, class I and II DSAs seem to be associated with an increased risk for graft failure, but this could not be assessed due to their low prevalence.  相似文献   

7.
Detrimental impact of preformed donor‐specific antibodies (DSAs) against human leucocyte antigens on outcomes after kidney transplantation are well documented, however, the value of their capacity to bind complement for predicting antibody‐mediated rejection (AMR) and graft survival still needs to be confirmed. We aimed to study DSA characteristics (strength and C1q binding) that might distinguish harmful DSA from clinically irrelevant ones. We retrospectively studied 60 kidney‐transplanted patients with preformed DSA detected by single antigen bead (SAB) assays (IgG and C1q kits), from a cohort of 517 kidney graft recipients (124 with detectable anti‐HLA antibodies). Patients were divided into DSA strength (MFI < vs. ≥ 15 000) and C1q‐binding ability. AMR frequency was high (30%) and it increased with DSA strength (P = 0.002) and C1q+ DSA (P < 0.001). The performance of DSA C1q‐binding ability as a predictor of AMR was better than DSA strength (diagnostic odds ratio 16.3 vs. 6.4, respectively). Furthermore, a multivariable logistic regression showed that C1q+ DSA was a risk factor for AMR (OR = 16.80, P = 0.001), while high MFI DSAs were not. Graft survival was lower in high MFI C1q+ DSA in comparison with patients with C1q? high or low MFI DSA (at 6 years, 38%, 83% and 80%, respectively; P = 0.001). Both DSA strength and C1q‐binding ability assessment seem valuable for improving pretransplant risk assessment. Since DSA C1q‐binding ability was a better predictor of AMR and correlated with graft survival, C1q‐SAB may be a particularly useful tool.  相似文献   

8.
This was a nationwide cohort study to investigate the impact of anti‐A/B and donor‐specific anti‐HLA (HLA‐DSA) antibodies on the clinical outcomes in kidney transplant recipients (KTRs). We classified a total of 1964 KTRs into four groups: transplants from ABO‐incompatible donors (ABOi, n = 248); transplants in recipients with HLA‐DSA (HLAi, n = 144); transplants from combined ABOi and HLAi donors (ABOi + HLAi, n = 31); and a control group for whom neither ABOi nor HLAi was applicable (CONT, n = 1541). We compared the incidence of biopsy‐proven acute rejection (BPAR), allograft and patient survival rates. The incidence of BPAR was higher in the HLAi and ABOi + HLAi groups relative to the CONT group; in contrast, it was not higher in the ABOi group. Death‐censored graft survival rates did not differ across the four groups. However, relative to the CONT group, patient survival rate was reduced in the ABOi and ABOi + HLAi groups, and with infection being the most common cause of death. Further, multivariable analysis revealed that desensitization therapy because of ABOi or HLAi was independent risk factors for patient mortality. HLAi was a more important risk factor for BPAR compared with ABOi. However, pretransplant desensitization therapy for either ABOi or HLAi significantly increased the risk of infection‐related mortality.  相似文献   

9.
Persistence of donor‐specific anti‐HLA antibodies (DSA) associated with antibody‐mediated graft injuries following kidney transplantation predicts evolution toward chronic humoral rejection and reduced graft survival. Targeting plasma cells, the main antibody‐producing cells, with the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib may be a promising desensitization strategy. We evaluated the in vivo efficacy of one cycle of bortezomib (1.3 mg/m2× 4 doses), used as the sole desensitization therapy, in four renal transplant recipients experiencing subacute antibody‐mediated rejection with persisting DSA (>2000 [Mean Fluorescence Intensity] MFI). Bortezomib treatment did not significantly decrease DSA MFI within the 150‐day posttreatment period in any patient. In addition, antivirus (HBV, VZV and HSV) antibody levels remained stable following treatment suggesting a lack of efficacy on long‐lived plasma cells. In conclusion, one cycle of bortezomib alone does not decrease DSA levels in sensitized kidney transplant recipients in the time period studied. These results underscore the need to evaluate this new desensitization agent properly in prospective, randomized and well‐controlled studies.  相似文献   

10.
Acceptable outcomes of donor‐specific antibody (DSA)‐positive living kidney transplantation (LKT) have recently been reported. However, LKT in crossmatch (XM)‐positive patients remains at high‐risk and requires an optimal desensitization protocol. We report our intermediate‐term outcomes of XM‐positive LKT vs. XM‐negative LKT in patients who underwent LKT between January 2012 and June 2015 in our institution. The rate of acute antibody‐mediated rejection (ABMR) within 90 days postoperation, graft function, and patient, and graft survival rates at 4 years were investigated. Patients were divided into three groups: XM?DSA? (n = 229), XM?DSA+ (n = 36), and XM + DSA+ (n = 15). The XM + DSA+ group patients underwent desensitization with high‐dose intravenous immunoglobulin, plasmapheresis, and rituximab. The rates of ABMR within 90 days in the XM?DSA?, XM?DSA+, and XM + DSA+ groups were 1.3%, 9.4%, and 60.0%, respectively (P < 0.001). There were no significant differences in the graft function throughout the observational period, the 4‐year patient or graft survival rates among three groups. This study showed that intermediate‐term outcomes of XM‐positive LKT were comparable to XM‐negative LKT. However, our current desensitization protocol cannot avert ABMR within 90 days, and XM positivity is still a significant risk factor for ABMR. Further refinement of the current desensitization regimen is required.  相似文献   

11.
In this review, we discuss a possible central role of T‐cell help in severe forms of graft damage mediated by donor‐specific HLA antibodies (DSA). Some kidney transplant recipients with pretransplant DSA show a high graft failure rate, whereas in other patients DSA do not harm the transplanted kidney and in most cases, disappear shortly after transplantation. Analyzing 80 desensitized highly immunized kidney transplant recipients and another multicenter cohort of 385 patients with pretransplant HLA antibodies, we reported recently that an ongoing T‐cell help from an activated immune system, as measured by an increased level of soluble CD30 in serum, might be necessary for the DSA to exert a deleterious effect. Patients positive for both pretransplant DSA and sCD30 appear to require special measures, such as the elimination of DSA from the circulation, potent immunosuppression, good HLA‐matching, and intense post‐transplant monitoring, whereas exclusion of DSA‐positive patients from transplantation in the absence of high sCD30 may not be justified in all cases, even if the pretransplant DSA are strong and complement‐activating.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract This study was designed to investigate the clinical relevance of donor‐specific antibodies (DS‐Abs) and their influence on graft survival. Among 106 patients who underwent cadaveric kidney donor transplantation and were monitored by flow cytometry crossmatch (FCXM) during the 1st posttransplantation year, 25 (23.6%) resulted positive for DS‐Ab production. During a 2‐year follow up only 12 of the 81 FCXM‐negative patients (14.8%) suffered rejection vs 17 of 25 FCXM‐positive patients (68%; P = 0.00001). Correlating graft loss to DS‐Ab production, 9 FCXM‐positive patients lost the graft vs only 1 among the FCXM‐negative patients. A worse graft function was evidenced in FCXM‐positive subjects who had also suffered rejection episodes than in those which had acute rejection but did not produce DS‐Abs. A high incidence of HLA‐AB mismatches was found in FCXM‐positive subjects which produced anti‐class I antibodies. FCXM appears useful in estimating post‐transplant alloimmune response. Moreover our findings confirm the harmful effects of anti‐class IDS‐Abs on long‐term graft survival.  相似文献   

13.
Outcomes after islet transplantation continue to improve but etiology of graft failure remains unclear. De novo donor‐specific human leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibodies (DSA) posttransplant are increasingly recognized as a negative prognostic marker. Specific temporal associations between DSA and graft function remain undefined particularly in programs undertaking multiple sequential transplants. Impact of de novo DSA on graft function over 12 months following first islet transplant was determined prospectively in consecutive recipients taking tacrolimus/mycophenolate immunosuppression at a single center. Mixed‐meal tolerance test was undertaken in parallel with HLA antibody assessment pretransplant and 1–3 months posttransplant. Sixteen participants received a total of 26 islet transplants. Five (19%) grafts were associated with de novo DSA. Five (31%) recipients were affected: three post–first transplant; two post–second transplant. DSA developed within 4 weeks of all sensitizing grafts and were associated with decreased stimulated C‐peptide (median [interquartile range]) at 3 months posttransplant (DSA negative: 613(300–1090); DSA positive 106(34–235) pmol/L [p = 0.004]). De novo DSA directed against most recent islet transplant were absolutely associated with loss of graft function despite maintained immunosuppression at 12 months in the absence of a rescue nonsensitizing transplant. Alemtuzumab induction immunosuppression was associated with reduced incidence of de novo DSA formation (p = 0.03).  相似文献   

14.
We report here on a European cohort of 27 kidney transplant recipients displaying operational tolerance, compared to two cohorts of matched kidney transplant recipients under immunosuppression and patients who stopped immunosuppressive drugs and presented with rejection. We report that a lower proportion of operationally tolerant patients received induction therapy (52% without induction therapy vs. 78.3%[p = 0.0455] and 96.7%[p = 0.0001], respectively), a difference likely due to the higher proportion (18.5%) of HLA matched recipients in the tolerant cohort. These patients were also significantly older at the time of transplantation (p = 0.0211) and immunosuppression withdrawal (p = 0.0002) than recipients who rejected their graft after weaning. Finally, these patients were at lower risk of infectious disease. Among the 27 patients defined as operationally tolerant at the time of inclusion, 19 still display stable graft function (mean 9 ± 4 years after transplantation) whereas 30% presented slow deterioration of graft function. Six of these patients tested positive for pre‐graft anti‐HLA antibodies. Biopsy histology studies revealed an active immunologically driven mechanism for half of them, associated with DSA in the absence of C4d. This study suggests that operational tolerance can persist as a robust phenomenon, although eventual graft loss does occur in some patients, particularly in the setting of donor‐specific alloantibody.  相似文献   

15.
The emerging role of humoral immunity in the pathogenesis of chronic allograft damage has prompted research aimed at assessing the role of anti‐HLA antibody (Ab) monitoring as a tool to predict allograft outcome. Data on the natural history of allografts in children developing de novo Ab after transplantation are limited. Utilizing sera collected pretransplant, and serially posttransplant, we retrospectively evaluated 82 consecutive primary pediatric kidney recipients, without pretransplant donor‐specific antibodies (DSA), for de novo Ab occurrence, and compared results with clinical–pathologic data. At 4.3‐year follow up, 19 patients (23%) developed de novo DSA whereas 24 had de novo non‐DSA (NDSA, 29%). DSA appeared at a median time of 24 months after transplantation and were mostly directed to HLA‐DQ antigens. Among the 82 patients, eight developed late/chronic active C4d+ antibody‐mediated rejection (AMR), and four C4d‐negative AMR. Late AMR correlated with DSA (p < 0.01), whose development preceded AMR by 1‐year median time. Patients with DSA had a median serum creatinine of 1.44 mg/dL at follow up, significantly higher than NDSA and Ab‐negative patients (p < 0.005). In our pediatric cohort, DSA identify patients at risk of renal dysfunction, AMR and graft loss; treatment started at Ab emergence might prevent AMR occurrence and/or progression to graft failure.  相似文献   

16.
This study analyzes the influence of preformed DSA, identified by HLA-specific ELISA assays, on graft survival and evaluates the incidence of antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) in patients with and without pregraft desensitization.
Kidney graft survival at 8 years was significantly worse in patients with DSA (n = 43) than in those without DSA (n = 194)(p = 0.03). The incidence of AMR in patients with DSA is 9-fold higher than in patients without DSA (p < 0.001) and their graft survival is significantly worse than in DSA patients without AMR and in non-DSA patients (p = 0.005). The prevalence for AMR in patients with DSA detected on historic serum is 32.3% in nondesensitized patients and 41.7% in desensitized patients. The risk for AMR is significantly more elevated in patients with strongly positive DSA (score 6–8) compared to those with DSA score 4 (p < 0.001), and in patients with historic DSA+/CXM+ compared to those with DSA+/CXM− (p = 0.01).
The presence of preformed DSA is strongly associated with graft loss in kidney transplants, related to an increased risk of AMR. Our findings demonstrate the importance of detection and characterization of DSA before transplantation. Stratification of this risk could be used to determine kidney allocation and to devise specific strategies for these patients.  相似文献   

17.
Protocols for recipient desensitization may allow for successful kidney transplantation across major immunological barriers. Desensitized recipients, however, still face a considerable risk of antibody‐mediated rejection (AMR), which underscores the need for risk stratification tools to individually tailor treatment. Here, we investigated whether solid phase detection of complement‐fixing donor‐specific antibodies (DSA) has the potential to improve AMR prediction in high‐risk transplants. The study included 68 sensitized recipients of deceased donor kidney allografts who underwent peritransplant immunoadsorption for alloantibody depletion (median cytotoxic panel reactivity: 73%; crossmatch conversion: n = 21). Pre and post‐transplant sera were subjected to detection of DSA‐triggered C4d deposition ([C4d]DSA) applying single‐antigen bead (SAB) technology. While standard crossmatch and [IgG]SAB testing failed to predict outcomes in our desensitized patients, detection of preformed [C4d]DSA (n = 44) was tightly associated with C4d‐positive AMR [36% vs. 8%, = 0.01; binary logistic regression: odds ratio: 10.1 (95% confidence interval: 1.6–64.2), = 0.01]. Moreover, long‐term death‐censored graft survival tended to be worse among [C4d]DSA‐positive recipients (= 0.07). There were no associations with C4d‐negative AMR or cellular rejection. [C4d]DSA detected 6 months post‐transplantation were not related to clinical outcomes. Our data suggest that pretransplant SAB‐based detection of complement‐fixing DSA may be a valuable tool for risk stratification.  相似文献   

18.
In this cohort study (N = 924), we investigated the evolution and clinical significance of pretransplant donor‐specific HLA antibodies (preDSA), detected in the single‐antigen beads assay but complement‐dependent cytotoxicity crossmatch‐negative. Donor specificity of the preDSA (N = 107) was determined by high‐resolution genotyping of donor‐recipient pairs. We found that in 52% of the patients with preDSA, preDSA spontaneously resolved within the first 3 months posttransplant. PreDSA that persisted posttransplant had higher pretransplant median fluorescence intensity values and more specificity against DQ. Patients with both resolved and persistent DSA had a high incidence of histological picture of antibody‐mediated rejection (ABMRh; 54% and 59% respectively). Patients with preDSA that persisted posttransplant had worse 10‐year graft survival compared to resolved DSA and preDSA‐negative patients. Compared to cases without preDSA, Cox modeling revealed an increased risk of graft failure only in the patients with persistent DSA, in the presence (hazard ratio [HR] = 8.3) but also in the absence (HR = 4.3) of ABMRh. In contrast, no increased risk of graft failure was seen in patients with resolved DSA. We conclude that persistence of preDSA posttransplant has a negative impact on graft survival, beyond ABMRh. Even in the absence of antibody‐targeting therapy, low median fluorescence intensity DSA and non‐DQ preDSA often disappear early posttransplantation and are not deleterious for graft outcome.  相似文献   

19.
Pancreas transplantation is a successful treatment for a selected group of people with type 1 diabetes. Continued insulin production can decrease over time and identifying predictors of long‐term graft function is key to improving survival. The aim of this study was to screen subjects for variation in the Caveolin‐1 gene (Cav1), previously shown to correlate with long‐term kidney transplant function. We genotyped 435 pancreas transplant donors and 431 recipients who had undergone pancreas transplantation at the Oxford Transplant Centre, UK, for all known common variation in Cav1. Death‐censored cumulative events were analyzed using Kaplan–Meier and Cox regression. Unlike kidney transplantation, the rs4730751 variant in our pancreas donors or transplant recipients did not correlate with long‐term graft function (p = 0.331–0.905). Presence of rs3801995 TT genotype (p = 0.009) and rs9920 CC/CT genotype (p = 0.010) in our donors did however correlate with reduced long‐term graft survival. Multivariate Cox regression (adjusted for donor and recipient transplant factors) confirmed the association of rs3801995 (p = 0.009, HR = 1.83;[95% CI = 1.16–2.89]) and rs9920 (p = 0.037, HR = 1.63; [95% CI = 1.03–2.73]) with long‐term graft function. This is the first study to provide evidence that donor Cav1 genotype correlates with long‐term pancreas graft function. Screening Cav1 in other datasets is required to confirm these pilot results.  相似文献   

20.
Patients requiring desensitization prior to renal transplantation are at risk for developing severe antibody‐mediated rejection (AMR) refractory to treatment with plasmapheresis and intravenous immunoglobulin (PP/IVIg). We have previously reported success at graft salvage, long‐term graft survival and protection against transplant glomerulopathy with the use of eculizumab and splenectomy in addition to PP/IVIg. Splenectomy may be an important component of this combination therapy and is itself associated with a marked reduction in donor‐specific antibody (DSA) production. However, splenectomy represents a major operation, and some patients with severe AMR have comorbid conditions that substantially increase their risk of complications during and after surgery. In an effort to spare recipients the morbidity of a second operation, we used splenic irradiation in lieu of splenectomy in two incompatible live donor kidney transplant recipients with severe AMR in addition to PP/IVIg, rituximab and eculizumab. This novel approach to the treatment of severe AMR was associated with allograft salvage, excellent graft function and no short‐ or medium‐term adverse effects of the radiation therapy. One‐year surveillance biopsies did not show transplant glomerulopathy (tg) on light microscopy, but microcirculation inflammation and tg were present on electron microscopy.  相似文献   

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