Impact of donor-specific antibodies on long-term graft survival with pediatric liver transplantation
Felicitas Leonie Schotters, Jan Beime, Andrea Briem‐Richter, Thomas M. C. Binder, Uta Herden, Enke Grabhorn
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In a previous paper, we reported a high prevalence of donor-specific antibody (DSA) in pediatric patients with chronic rejection and expressed the need for confirmation of these findings in a larger cohort. AIM: To clarify the importance of DSAs on long-term graft survival in a larger cohort of pediatric patients. METHODS: = 69). Groups were compared with regard to liver function, biopsy findings, graft survival, need for re-LT and immunosuppressive medication. RESULTS: = 0.018) than DSA-negative patients. Class II DSAs particularly influenced graft survival. Alleles DQ2, DQ7, DQ8 and DQ9 might serve as indicators for the risk of chronic rejection and/or allograft fibrosis. Mean fluorescence intensity levels and DSA number did not impact graft survival. Previous episodes of chronic rejection might lead to DSA development. CONCLUSION: DSA prevalence significantly affected long-term liver allograft performance and liver allograft survival in our cohort of pediatric LT. Screening for class II DSAs in combination with assessment of protocol liver biopsies for chronic antibody-mediated rejection improved early identification of patients at risk of graft loss.