Posttransplant immunosuppression in highly sensitized patients.

Journal: Contributions To Nephrology
Published:
Abstract

Recent desensitization protocols using the combination of plasmapheresis (PP) or immunoadsorption to remove donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies (DSA) and/or intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) and rituximab to downregulate antibody-mediated immune responses have made kidney transplantation feasible by abrogating cross-match positivity. Despite good short-term patient and graft survival, acute antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) continued to be an important barrier seen in 20-30% of patients receiving desensitization protocols and it is still not clear which protocol (high-dose IVIG, PP/low-dose IVIG), what type of induction treatment (thymoglobulin, anti-IL-2R antibodies, alemtuzumab), or addition of rituximab is better for the prevention of early acute AMR. Future prospective, multicenter, and randomized trials are required to decide the ideal protocol for sensitized patients.

Authors
Enver Akalin
Relevant Conditions

Splenectomy, Kidney Transplant