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Successful A2 to B Deceased Donor Kidney Transplant after Desensitization for High-Strength Non-HLA Antibody Made Possible by Utilizing a Hepatitis C Positive Donor

Desensitization using plasma exchange can remove harmful antibodies prior to transplantation and mitigate risks for hyperacute and severe early acute antibody-mediated rejection. Traditionally, the use of plasma exchange requires a living donor so that the timing of treatments relative to transplant...

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Autores principales: Karpel, H. Charli, Ali, Nicole M., Lawson, Nikki, Tatapudi, Vasishta S., Friedlander, Rex, Philogene, Mary Carmelle, Montgomery, Robert A., Lonze, Bonnie E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7094197/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32231847
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/3591274
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author Karpel, H. Charli
Ali, Nicole M.
Lawson, Nikki
Tatapudi, Vasishta S.
Friedlander, Rex
Philogene, Mary Carmelle
Montgomery, Robert A.
Lonze, Bonnie E.
author_facet Karpel, H. Charli
Ali, Nicole M.
Lawson, Nikki
Tatapudi, Vasishta S.
Friedlander, Rex
Philogene, Mary Carmelle
Montgomery, Robert A.
Lonze, Bonnie E.
author_sort Karpel, H. Charli
collection PubMed
description Desensitization using plasma exchange can remove harmful antibodies prior to transplantation and mitigate risks for hyperacute and severe early acute antibody-mediated rejection. Traditionally, the use of plasma exchange requires a living donor so that the timing of treatments relative to transplant can be planned. Non-HLA antibody is increasingly recognized as capable of causing antibody-mediated renal allograft rejection and has been associated with decreased graft longevity. Our patient had high-strength non-HLA antibody deemed prohibitive to transplantation without desensitization, but no living donors. As the patient was eligible to receive an A2 ABO blood group organ and was willing to accept a hepatitis C positive donor kidney, this afforded a high probability of receiving an offer within a short enough time frame to attempt empiric desensitization in anticipation of a deceased donor transplant. Fifteen plasma exchange treatments were performed before the patient received an organ offer, and the patient was successfully transplanted. Hepatitis C infection was treated posttransplant. No episodes of rejection were observed. At one-year posttransplant, the patient maintains good graft function. In this case, willingness to consider nontraditional donor organs enabled us to mimic living donor desensitization using a deceased donor.
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spelling pubmed-70941972020-03-30 Successful A2 to B Deceased Donor Kidney Transplant after Desensitization for High-Strength Non-HLA Antibody Made Possible by Utilizing a Hepatitis C Positive Donor Karpel, H. Charli Ali, Nicole M. Lawson, Nikki Tatapudi, Vasishta S. Friedlander, Rex Philogene, Mary Carmelle Montgomery, Robert A. Lonze, Bonnie E. Case Rep Transplant Case Report Desensitization using plasma exchange can remove harmful antibodies prior to transplantation and mitigate risks for hyperacute and severe early acute antibody-mediated rejection. Traditionally, the use of plasma exchange requires a living donor so that the timing of treatments relative to transplant can be planned. Non-HLA antibody is increasingly recognized as capable of causing antibody-mediated renal allograft rejection and has been associated with decreased graft longevity. Our patient had high-strength non-HLA antibody deemed prohibitive to transplantation without desensitization, but no living donors. As the patient was eligible to receive an A2 ABO blood group organ and was willing to accept a hepatitis C positive donor kidney, this afforded a high probability of receiving an offer within a short enough time frame to attempt empiric desensitization in anticipation of a deceased donor transplant. Fifteen plasma exchange treatments were performed before the patient received an organ offer, and the patient was successfully transplanted. Hepatitis C infection was treated posttransplant. No episodes of rejection were observed. At one-year posttransplant, the patient maintains good graft function. In this case, willingness to consider nontraditional donor organs enabled us to mimic living donor desensitization using a deceased donor. Hindawi 2020-03-13 /pmc/articles/PMC7094197/ /pubmed/32231847 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/3591274 Text en Copyright © 2020 H. Charli Karpel et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Report
Karpel, H. Charli
Ali, Nicole M.
Lawson, Nikki
Tatapudi, Vasishta S.
Friedlander, Rex
Philogene, Mary Carmelle
Montgomery, Robert A.
Lonze, Bonnie E.
Successful A2 to B Deceased Donor Kidney Transplant after Desensitization for High-Strength Non-HLA Antibody Made Possible by Utilizing a Hepatitis C Positive Donor
title Successful A2 to B Deceased Donor Kidney Transplant after Desensitization for High-Strength Non-HLA Antibody Made Possible by Utilizing a Hepatitis C Positive Donor
title_full Successful A2 to B Deceased Donor Kidney Transplant after Desensitization for High-Strength Non-HLA Antibody Made Possible by Utilizing a Hepatitis C Positive Donor
title_fullStr Successful A2 to B Deceased Donor Kidney Transplant after Desensitization for High-Strength Non-HLA Antibody Made Possible by Utilizing a Hepatitis C Positive Donor
title_full_unstemmed Successful A2 to B Deceased Donor Kidney Transplant after Desensitization for High-Strength Non-HLA Antibody Made Possible by Utilizing a Hepatitis C Positive Donor
title_short Successful A2 to B Deceased Donor Kidney Transplant after Desensitization for High-Strength Non-HLA Antibody Made Possible by Utilizing a Hepatitis C Positive Donor
title_sort successful a2 to b deceased donor kidney transplant after desensitization for high-strength non-hla antibody made possible by utilizing a hepatitis c positive donor
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7094197/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32231847
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/3591274
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