| Literature DB >> 31066215 |
Paige M Porrett1, Peter P Reese2, Vera Holzmayer3, Kelly E Coller3, Mary Kuhns3, Vivianna M Van Deerlin4, Caren Gentile4, Jennifer R Smith4, Anna Sicilia2, Ashley Woodards2, Rhondalyn McLean2, Peter Abt1, Roy D Bloom2, K Rajender Reddy2, Emily Blumberg2, Gavin Cloherty3, David Goldberg2.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) seroconversion among HCV-uninfected transplant recipients from HCV-infected (NAT+/Antibody+) or HCV-exposed (NAT-/Antibody+) donors has been reported. However, the origin of anti-HCV antibody and the implications of seroconversion remain unknown. We longitudinally tested plasma from HCV-uninfected kidney (n = 31) or heart transplant recipients (n = 9) of an HCV NAT+ organ for anti-HCV antibody (both IgG and IgM isotypes). Almost half of all participants had detectable anti-HCV antibody at any point during follow-up. The majority of antibody-positive individuals became positive within 1-3 days of transplantation, and 6 recipients had detectable antibody on the first day posttransplant. Notably, all anti-HCV antibody was IgG, even in samples collected posttransplant day 1. Late seroconversion was uncommon (≈20%-25% of antibody+ recipients). Early antibody persisted over 30 days in kidney recipients, whereas early antibody dropped below detection in 50% of heart recipients within 2 weeks after transplant. Anti-HCV antibody is common in HCV-uninfected recipients of an HCV NAT+ organ. The IgG isotype of this antibody and the kinetics of its appearance and durability suggest that anti-HCV antibody is donor derived and is likely produced by a cellular source. Our data suggest that transfer of donor humoral immunity to a recipient may be much more common than previously appreciated.Entities:
Keywords: antibody biology; clinical research/practice; donor-derived infections; donors and donation; hepatitis C; infection and infectious agents - viral; kidney transplantation/nephrology; translational research/science
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31066215 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.15415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086