THE FLOW CYTOMETRIC CROSSMATCH AND EARLY RENAL TRANSPLANT LOSS
- 1 March 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 49 (3) , 527-534
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-199003000-00011
Abstract
Data from this retrospective study indicate that a positive two-color T and/or B cell flow cytometric cross-match (FCXM) is predictive of early renal allograft loss (less than 2 months) in cadaveric kidney donor recipients who had a negative crossmatch by the antihuman globulin complement-dependent cytotoxicity technique. Among 90 cadaveric kidney donor recipients (67 primary, 23 regrafts), 14 (8 primary, 6 regrafts) lost their renal allografts within 2 months, and 10 of the 14 were FCXM positive and HLA sensitized. The remaining 76 allografts survived beyond 2 months, 12 of which were FCXM-positive. Thus, the FCXM sensitivity rate for detecting early graft loss was 71%, and the specificity rate was 84%. Cadaveric graft-loss rates at 2 months were 33% for primary and 60% for FCXM-positive regrafts in contrast to 7% for primary and 0% for FCXM-negative regrafts. The difference in early graft loss.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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