Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

A FOUR-YEAR EXPERIENCE WITH DONOR BLOOD TRANSFUSION PROTOCOLS FOR LIVING-DONOR RENAL TRANSPLANTATION

1985; Wolters Kluwer; Volume: 39; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1097/00007890-198506000-00008

ISSN

1534-6080

Autores

Neal R. Glass, Douglas T. Miller, Hans W. Sollinger, Folkert O. Belzer,

Tópico(s)

Organ Transplantation Techniques and Outcomes

Resumo

Our experience over the last 4 years with HLA-identical, donor-specific transfusion (DST), and Imuran (IM) + DST living-donor transplants in 206 patients is presented. Transplants from 8 completely incompatible sibling donors, 4 distantly related donors, and 7 unrelated donors are included. Except for a slightly higher average serum creatinine, and a markedly reduced rate of donor-specific sensitization in the IM + DST group when compared with the DST group (14% vs. 31%, P less than .005), the results of transplantation using these 3 protocols have been equivalent. Actuarial one-year survival was 97% for patients and 93% for grafts for the combined group of 206 patients. Of the 44 patients who entered the DST or IM + DST protocols but were not transplanted, 31 patients (70%) have subsequently been transplanted, and all 5 recipients of living-donor kidneys and 20 of 26 recipients of cadaveric kidneys (77%) have functioning grafts. Because it optimizes the availability of transplantable living-donor kidneys, gives results equivalent to those obtained with HLA-identical donors and the DST protocol, and is not associated with clinically apparent adverse effects, we now use the IM + DST protocol for all living-donor transplants except those between HLA-identical donor-recipient pairs.

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