Abstract

A female patient presented for follow-up care approximately ten years post-cardiac transplantation. HLA antibody testing revealed multiple class I and class II donor specific antibodies (DSA), including anti-HLA A1 (MFI > 2500), DQ6, and DQ7/DQ8/DQ9 antibodies (DQ antibodies have MFIs >15,000). Per our current testing protocols, the sample was reflexed to C1q to determine if any DSAs were complement- fixing. As expected, based on antibody strength, the class II DSAs were C1q positive, while anti-HLA A1 was C1q negative. Interestingly, C1q testing revealed reactivity for anti-HLA B8 which was not previously detected by our standard IgG testing methodology. While anti-HLA B8 was not a DSA to the previous transplant, we wanted to determine the underlying cause for the positive reactivity seen with C1q testing: prozone effect or IgM? Since our laboratory routinely treats all sera tested for HLA antibodies with EDTA prior to testing, we thought prozone was unlikely as previous studies performed in our lab demonstrated the removal of this effect. Nonetheless, to rule out prozone with another method, IgG testing was repeated using a series of dilutions (Neat, 1:4, 1:16, 1:64, and 1:256). This testing did not yield positive reactivity for anti-HLA B8, and therefore prozone effect was excluded, indicating that EDTA methodology is robust to overcome prozone effect. To confirm the isotype of this antibody, IgM testing was conducted in three sera using the same assays as the IgG testing which produced positive results. In conclusion, anti-HLA B8 was determined to be complement-fixing and of the IgM isotype. Unexpectedly, our results supported the absence of an IgM-IgG isotype class switch for the period of testing performed in our lab spanning 17 months. *RLU and JJX contributed equally to this work.

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