| Literature DB >> 2665219 |
P A Dyer1, R W Johnson, S Martin, A Bakran, R Gokal, R Harris, N P Mallick, J Manos, W M Orr, R C Pearson.
Abstract
In the 20-year period from March 1968 to March 1988, 860 patients received 1001 renal transplants in the Northwestern Regional Renal Transplant Unit at Manchester Royal Infirmary. Through a continuing policy of avoiding mismatches for HLA antigens and lymphocytotoxic antibody crossmatching, transplant survival rates were found to correlate with the degree of HLA-A and B antigen mismatching from 1968 to 1978 and with HLA-B and DR antigen mismatching from 1979 to 1988. Mismatching for HLA-B and DR antigens was also found to correlate with transplant survival in highly sensitized patients and in patients transplanted since 1981, the "cyclosporine era." Recipients who were HLA-DR1 positive were found to have the highest graft survival compared to recipients negative for this antigen. In contrast, HLA-DR3 positive recipients had the poorest outcome. Transplants from HLA-DRw6 positive donors showed higher transplant survival rates than donor kidneys positive for any other HLA-DR antigen. A correlation of transplant survival with HLA-B and DR mismatching was seen whether kidneys were collected within our region or received through the UK Transplant Service. We conclude that avoidance of mismatching for HLA-B and DR antigens confers high transplant survival rates (91.1% at 5 years for 0 HLA-B and DR mismatches), and in order to achieve this rate for most recipients exchange of donor kidneys between transplant centers will be essential.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2665219 DOI: 10.1097/00007890-198907000-00030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transplantation ISSN: 0041-1337 Impact factor: 4.939