Desensitization in HLA-Incompatible Kidney Recipients and Survival
Abstract
More than 20,000 candidates for kidney transplantation in the United States are sensitized to HLA and may have a prolonged wait for a transplant, with a reduced transplantation rate and an increased rate of death. One solution is to perform live-donor renal transplantation after the depletion of donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies. Whether such antibody depletion results in a survival benefit as compared with waiting for an HLA-compatible kidney is unknown.
We used a protocol that included plasmapheresis and the administration of low-dose intravenous immune globulin to desensitize 211 HLA-sensitized patients who subsequently underwent renal transplantation (treatment group). We compared rates of death between the group undergoing desensitization treatment and two carefully matched control groups of patients on a waiting list for kidney transplantation who continued to undergo dialysis (dialysis-only group) or who underwent either dialysis or HLA-compatible transplantation (dialysis-or-transplantation group).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 34.15
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
12Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Dialysis
- Desensitization (medicine)
- Transplantation
- Kidney transplantation
- Plasmapheresis
- Survival rate
- Kidney
- Good health and well-being