PRESENSITIZATION AND THE RENAL ALLOGRAFT RECIPIENT
- 1 February 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 47 (2) , 234-239
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-198902000-00007
Abstract
We examined data from the New England Organ Bank to characterize the influence of patient sensitization on allograft survival, and our current crossmatching strategy. To evaluate our recipient eligibility criteria, we compared computer-predicted crossmatch results to 3622 actual crossmatches. A computer-predicted positive crossmatch was highly predictive of an actual positive crossmatch, for patients with a percentage reactive antibody of 40% of more (positive predictive value 91-99%), thus obviating the need to perform the actual crossmatch. Given the high prevalence of sensitized patients on our waiting list, very few individuals are inappropriately excluded from consideration for an available organ. In contrast, a negative computer prediction was never sufficiently predictive of a negative crossmatch to dispense with the actual crossmatching procedure. We also compared graft survival in patients with positive antidonor crossmatches using historical (>6 months old) sera with those with those with negative historical crossmatches (or with no history of humoral sensitization). One-year actuarial graft survival in the first group was 61.0 .+-. 6.0%, compared with 85.2 .+-. 1.4% in those without positive historical crossmatches (P<0.001). This adverse effect of a positive historical crossmatch was true in both first transplants (n=41, 1-year graft survival 67.9 .+-. 7.4% vs. 86.2 .+-. 1.6%, P<0.005) and in regrafted individuals (n=29, 1-year graft survival 50.7 .+-. 9.8% vs. 78.9 .+-. 3.7%, P<0.01). The inability to accurately predict negative crossmatches, and the possible adverse effect of positive historical crossmatches on graft survival, represent potential obstacles to a goal of national organ sharing.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
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