AI Article Synopsis

  • The study indicates that transplanting kidneys from HBcAb+ donors has a very low risk of transmitting hepatitis B virus to recipients.
  • Over 4 years, 36 transplants were performed with no cases of clinical HBV infection in patients receiving these kidneys, regardless of their vaccination status.
  • The results suggest that using kidneys from HBcAb+ donors is safe and could help increase the number of available organ donors without compromising patient or graft survival.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The rate of hepatitis B virus transmission via organs from with isolated hepatitis B virus core antibody-positive (HBcAb+) donors in kidney transplant recipients seems very low.

Patients And Methods: Over 4 years, we performed 36 transplants from Ig HBcAb+, hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-negative donors into recipients with a history of prior hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection or reported vaccination (28 patients) and in recipients who were not immunized and received a pretransplant prophylaxis with hepatitis B immunoglobulins. We examined the HBV-related outcomes in these 36 patients in comparison with 40 recipients of allografts from HBcAb- donors.

Results: No patient receiving an allograft from an HBcAb+ donor developed clinical HBV infection or HBSAg positivity. The rate of seroconversion was 14.2% in immunized patients, 12.5% in nonimmunized patients, and 0% in the control group. The 17.8% of immunized patients developed elevated transaminases after transplant, in comparison with 25% and 10% in the nonimmunized patients and the control group, respectively. Graft and patient survival was 93% and 93% for immunized patients, 100% and 100% for nonimmunized patients, and 98% and 95% for the control group, respectively.

Conclusion: The use of anti-HBc antibody-positive kidneys was associated with no risk of transmission of HBV infection, without affecting graft and patient survival, and could be considered a safe way to expand the donor pool. Our preliminary results suggest that such kidneys could be safely transplanted even in not immunized patients who underwent a prophylaxis with hepatitis B immunoglobulins.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.transproceed.2005.06.068DOI Listing

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