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Heart transplantation across preformed donor-specific antibody barriers using a perioperative desensitization protocol

Authors :
Wiebke Sommer
Murat Avsar
Khalil Aburahma
Jawad Salman
Klaus Tim Kaufeld
Sebastian V. Rojas
Anna L. Meyer
Evgeny Chichelnitskiy
Caner Süsal
Michael M. Kreusser
Murielle Verboom
Michael Hallensleben
Christoph Bara
Rainer Blasczyk
Christine Falk
Matthias Karck
Axel Haverich
Fabio Ius
Gregor Warnecke
Source :
American Journal of Transplantation. 22:2064-2076
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Heart transplantation across preformed donor-specific HLA-antibody barriers is associated with impaired short- and long-term survival. Therefore, in recipients with preformed anti-HLA antibodies, waiting for crossmatch-negative donors is standard practice. As an alternative strategy, recipients with preformed anti-HLA donor specific antibodies have been managed at our institutions with a perioperative desensitization regimen. A retrospective analysis was performed comparing heart transplant recipients with preformed donor-specific HLA-antibodies to recipients without donor-specific antibodies. Recipients with a positive virtual crossmatch received a perioperative desensitization protocol including tocilizumab intraoperatively, plasma exchange and rituximab followed by a six-month course of IgGAM. Among the 117 heart-transplanted patients, 19 (16%) patients underwent perioperative desensitization, and the remaining 98 (84%) patients did not. Cold ischemic time, posttransplant extracorporeal life support for primary graft dysfunction, and intensive care unit stay time did not differ between groups. At 1-year follow-up, freedom from pulsed steroid therapy for presumed rejection and biopsy-confirmed acute cellular or humoral rejection did not differ between groups. One-year survival amounted to 94.7% in the treated patients and 81.4% in the control group. Therefore, heart transplantation in sensitized recipients undergoing a perioperative desensitization appears safe with comparable postoperative outcomes as patients with a negative crossmatch.

Details

ISSN :
16006135
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bc72a4035b174b551f9ae86c82b0967e