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Mid-Term Outcome of Donor Specific Antibody Positive Deceased Donor Kidney Transplantation with Peri-Transplant Desensitization

K. Osickova,1 P. Hruba,2 J. Slatinska,1 A. Slavcev,2 J. Fronek,2 E. Honsova,2 O. Viklicky.1

1Dept. of Nephrology, Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Prague, Czech Republic
2Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Prague, Czech Republic.

Meeting: 2018 American Transplant Congress

Abstract number: A147

Keywords: Alloantibodies, Graft survival, Kidney transplantation, Sensitization

Session Information

Session Name: Poster Session A: Kidney Immunosuppression: Desensitization

Session Type: Poster Session

Date: Saturday, June 2, 2018

Session Time: 5:30pm-7:30pm

 Presentation Time: 5:30pm-7:30pm

Location: Hall 4EF

Donor specific HLA-antibodies (DSA) remain a large barrier to successful kidney transplantation and there is a limited knowledge about desensitization strategies in deceased donor programs.

Anti HLA antibodies specificity in all wait-listed patients has been tested by Luminex since 2013 to tailor peri- and post-transplant immunosuppression. 100 deceased donor kidney transplant recipients with pre-transplant DSA >1000 MFI was included in this prospective observational study. Desensitization protocol consisted of plasma exchange (PE) prior to transplant and rATG (Thymoglobulin) induction along with IVIG 0.1-0.5 g/kg given at first week in patients with MFI ranging 1000-5000 (DSA+, n=69). This protocol was accompanied by post-transplant PE/PP and rituximab in patients with MFI>5000 MFI (DSA++, n=31). All patients had negative actual CDC crossmatch prior to pre-transplant PE. The 3-years transplant outcomes of two DSA-pos cohorts were analyzed and compared with 952 DSA-neg controls treated with anti-CD25 or rATG induction. All patients received TAC/MMF/St therapy.

1-year death-censored graft survival was similar in DSA-pos and DSA-neg groups (DSA+ 94.9%, DSA++ 92.3% and DSA- 94.8%) while at 3 years DSA-pos patients had inferior censored graft survival (DSA+ 83.1%, DSA++ 77.7%, DSA- 94.0%, p=0.05). The acute antibody mediated rejection (ABMR) incidence was 19% in DSA+ group while 42% in DSA++ group respectively (p<0.05). Univariate analysis showed higher PRA (p=0.01), HLA mismatch (p=0.016), longer dialysis (p=0.016), longer cold ischemia (p=0.008), male recipient gender (p=0.012), re-transplantation (p<0.001), DSA class II (p=0.018) and DQ/DP DSA (p=0.002) in DSA-pos patients who developed ABMR compared those who did not. The binary logistic regression with forward method identified two main significant predictors of ABMR: re-transplantation (OR: 0.08; 95% CI: 0.17-0.36; p=0.001) and HLA mismatch (OR: 1.63; 95% CI: 1.1-2.4; p=0.016). The model had 90.5 % specificity and 38.5% sensitivity to predict ABMR among DSA-pos patients.

In conclusion, the peri-transplant desensitization represents a viable tool that enables successful kidney transplantation to patients with moderate or even with high level of sensitization in a country without the access to acceptable mismatch program.

CITATION INFORMATION: Osickova K., Hruba P., Slatinska J., Slavcev A., Fronek J., Honsova E., Viklicky O. Mid-Term Outcome of Donor Specific Antibody Positive Deceased Donor Kidney Transplantation with Peri-Transplant Desensitization Am J Transplant. 2017;17 (suppl 3).

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To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Osickova K, Hruba P, Slatinska J, Slavcev A, Fronek J, Honsova E, Viklicky O. Mid-Term Outcome of Donor Specific Antibody Positive Deceased Donor Kidney Transplantation with Peri-Transplant Desensitization [abstract]. https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/mid-term-outcome-of-donor-specific-antibody-positive-deceased-donor-kidney-transplantation-with-peri-transplant-desensitization/. Accessed May 12, 2025.

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