Abstract

To study the relevance of anti-donor antibody (ADA) to chronic rejection in kidney transplantation, we retrospectively examined the long-term kinetics of ADA by flow cytometric analysis. Among 537 recipients who underwent living-donor kidney transplantation between 1986 and 1994, 29 patients with chronic rejection (CR group) and 33 patients with stable graft function (ST group) were randomly selected for analysis. Patient serum taken 1 or 2 days before transplantation, serum taken 1 month after transplantation, and the most current serum were analyzed for the presence of ADA to donor T and B cells. In the CR group, IgG antibody to donor B cells of the most current serum was positive in 25 of 29 patients, whereas it was positive in only 5 patients in the ST group P<0.001. The mean fluorescent intensity of the antibody was also significantly higher in the CR group than that in ST group P<0.01. In contrast, IgG antibody to donor T cells of the most current serum was positive in only five patients in the CR group. No significant difference was observed in the pretransplant and 1-month posttransplant sera between the CR and ST groups. We conclude that the posttransplant production of IgG antibody to donor B cells seemed to be highly relevant to chronic rejection.

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