Background: Pre-transplant blood transfusion (BT) results in better graft survival in organ transplant recipients, especially when BT donor and allograft recipient share an HLA-DR antigen. Although the immunologic mechanisms involved are still poorly understood, we wanted to know whether down regulation of donor-reactive T cells play a role.
Methods: In a retrospective study, we analyzed the clinical effects of BT for 45 heart transplant (HTx) patients who had each received 1 BT that shared an HLA-DR-antigen with the recipient, and 55 who had a DR-mismatched BT before heart transplantation.
Background: In a previous study it was shown that pre-transplant blood transfusion was associated with a better clinical outcome after heart transplantation (HTx). In this study the effect of heart transplantation (HTx) on the T cell receptor V beta chain (TCRVbeta) repertoire was investigated. Therefore, we analyzed the TCRVbeta repertoire of patients after HTx to see whether a correlation with clinical outcome could be observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRenal allograft survival is prolonged after pretransplantation blood transfusion. The aim of this study was to test retrospectively the development and persistence of microchimaerism after pretransplantation blood transfusion and to assess whether the type of blood transfusion (partially matched [= sharing of at least one HLA-B and one HLA-DR antigen between blood donor and recipient] versus mismatched) influences the (continued) presence of donor-type cells. A sensitive nested PCR technique based on HLA-DRB1 allele-specific amplification using sequence-specific primers (detection level: one donor cell among 10(5) recipient cells) for detection of donor cells was implemented in our laboratory.
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