Abstract

Currently, patients with pre-exsiting donor-specific antibody (DSA) are prone to antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) after surgery and are at a relatively high risk of postoperative complications and graft failure. The risk of postoperative complications and graft failure is relatively high. This study aims to discuss the clinical outcome of DSA-positive kidney transplantation and analyze the role and safety of preoperative pretreatment in DSA-positive kidney transplantation, providing single-center treatment experience for DSA-positive kidney transplantation. We retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 15 DSA-positive kidney transplants in the Department of Renal Transplantation of First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University from August 2017 to July 2022. Eight cases were organ donation after citizen's death (DCD) kidney transplant recipients, of which 3 cases in the early stage were not treated with preoperative desensitisation therapy (DCD untreated group, n=3), and 5 recipients were treated with preoperative rituximab desensitisation (DCD preprocessing group, n=5). The remaining 7 cases were living related donors recipients (LRD) who received preoperative desensitisation treatment with rituximab and plasma exchange (LRD preprocessing group, n=7). We observed and recorded the incidence of complications with changes in renal function and DSA levels in the recipients and the survival of the recipients and transplanted kidneys at 1, 3 and 5 years, and to compare the differences in recovery and postoperative complications between 3 groups. All 15 recipients were positive for preoperative panel reactive antibody (PRA) and DSA and were treated with methylprednisolone+rabbit anti-human thymocyte immunoglobulin induction before kidney transplantation. DCD untreated group all suffered from DSA level rebound, delayed renal graft function (DGF) and rejection reaction after surgery. After the combined treatment, DSA level was reduced and the graft renal function returned to normal. The DCD preprocessing group were all without antibody rebound, 1 recipient developed DGF and the renal function returned to normal after plasmapheresis, and the remaining 4 recipients recovered their renal function to normal within 2 weeks after the operation. In the LRD preprocessing group, 2 cases had antibody rebound and 1 case had rejection, but all of them recovered to normal after treatment, and DSA was maintained at a low level or even disappeared. The incidence of DGF and rejection in the DCD untreated group were significantly higher than that in the DCD preprocessing group and the LRD preprocessing group; and there were no significant difference in the incidence of postoperative haematuria, proteinuria, bacterial and fungal infections, and BK virus infection between the 3 groups (all P>0.05). A total of 11 of the 15 recipients were followed up for more than 1 year, 6 for more than 3 years, and 1 for more than 5 years, and the survival rates of both the recipients and the transplanted kidneys were 100%. Effective preoperative pretreatment with desensitization therapy can effectively prevent antibody rebound in DSA-positive kidney transplantation and reduce perioperative complications.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call