UTILIZATION OF INTRAVENOUS IMMUNOGLOBULIN TO AMELIORATE ALLOANTIBODIES IN A HIGHLY SENSITIZED PATIENT WITH A CARDIAC ASSIST DEVICE AWAITING HEART TRANSPLANTATION

Abstract
Surgery surrounding the use of mechanical assistance in cardiac transplant candidates often leads to multiple blood/platelet transfusions and subsequent development of alloantibodies. This is a case report of a 50-year-old male patient who had received blood transfusions during coronary bypass grafting 9 years earlier. He presented in acute and chronic heart failure and, despite therapy, became moribund with multisystem organ failure. His ejection fraction was 10%. A Novacor ventricular assist device was implanted on May 19, 1995 (day 0). The patient received 44 U of blood and 20 U of platelets. Although his percent reactive antibodies (PRA) were negative before surgery by fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis, the PRA 3 days after implantation of the ventricular assist device was 80%; it increased to 100% by day 7. In an attempt to decrease the PRA, intravenous immunoglobulin was given at 3-week intervals. The PRA became negative and the patient received a donor heart that was negative by fluorescence-activated cell sorter cross-match on day 64. On days 69-72, a dramatic increase in alloantibody activity was promptly reversed with additional intravenous immunoglobulin. Currently at posttransplant month 12, the patient shows no humoral, cellular, or vascular evidence of rejection.