Abstract

In a previous study, DNA typing revealed that 25% of serological HLA-DR typings of kidney transplants were incorrect. In the current study, we analyzed whether this error rate had improved in recent years, and whether there were differences according to geographical region. From 1988 to 1991 the error rate of serological typing improved slightly in Western Europe from 19% to 16%, and in North America, from 21% to 16%. In Eastern Europe, the error rate decreased from 49% to 33% in 1991, whereas the rate remained high in South America at 60% in 1988 and 72% in 1991. The high error rates in South America and Eastern Europe reflected a lack of good quality serological typing reagents. The 16% typing errors in Western Europe and North America demonstrated the current limit of serological techniques for cadaver donor typing and underlined the need for prospective DNA typing.

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