Flow cytometric crossmatching and panel-reactive antibodies in chronic renal failure patients.
Objective: Anti-donor antibodies, denoted as "panel-reactive antibodies" (PRAs), are one of the most important factors influencing graft survival after renal transplantation. PRA is generally analyzed with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay or flow cytometry (FC), which identify the HLA antigen specific for the preformed antibody.
Methods: We tested 66 patients for FC crossmatch (FCXM) when they were called for cadaveric renal transplantation. Thirty of 66 patients were FCXM-positive; 36 were FCXM-negative. Among the FCXM positive crossmatches, 21 were T- and B-cell positive; seven B positive; and two T positive. The HLA antibodies in the sera of FCXM-positive patients were reanalyzed using flow-PRA.
Results: We detected HLA antibodies in 28/66 sera with flow PRA. The sera of 16/21 T-/B-, FCXM-positive patients contained both class I and II anti-HLA antibodies, five had only class I anti-HLA antibodies. One out of seven B-cell FCXM-positive patients had class I and class II anti-HLA antibodies, three, class I and 1 class II anti-HLA antibodies; the other two were negative. Class I and class II HLA antibodies were observed in two T-cell FCXM-positive patients. Four of 36 patients who were FCXM-negative were flow PRA positive: one had both class I and class II HLA antibodies and three, only class I HLA antibody. The comparison of FCXM and flow PRA results was significant (P = .001).
Conclusions: FCXM results may be confirmed by flow PRA tests, an important method to differentiate HLA versus non-HLA antibodies.