STATUS OF MICROCHIMERISM IN RECIPIENTS 15 YEARS AFTER LIVING RELATED KIDNEY TRANSPLANTATION

Abstract
To study the relevance of microchimerism to the long-term outcome of renal allografting, we analyzed the frequency of microchimerism in kidney transplant recipients who had stable graft function for 15 years or longer. Among the 104 recipients who underwent kidney transplantation between 1971 and 1980, 27 renal allografts (26%) are still functioning. Among these 27 patients, 13 recipients whose donor was still alive and cooperative were investigated for the presence of microchimerism in the peripheral blood and for their immunological status. Microchimerism was tested using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) method. To test the sensitivity of PCP-SSCP, the peripheral blood obtained within 5 weeks after transplantation (four kidney transplants, three liver transplants) was also examined. Microchimerism was detectable in five patients within 5 weeks of transplantation (kidney transplantation, 3/4; liver transplantation 2/3. However, in the patients studied 15 years after transplantation, microchimerism was detected in only one recipient (1/13). In this chimeric patient, mixed lymphocyte response revealed high responsiveness against donor antigen. In contrast, some patients who did not have chimerism showed donor-specific hyporesponsiveness in mixed lymphocyte response assay and did not develop antidonor antibody, according to flow cytometric analysis. Microchimerism is an infrequent state in the long-term survivors of kidney allografting, and this state is irrelevant to donor-specific unresponsiveness.