Background: Before kidney transplantation, a serological crossmatch is routinely performed between donor and recipient to prevent hyperacute rejection by donor-specific anti-human leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibodies. After transplantation, the presence of these antibodies is not routinely monitored. We wanted to know whether donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies are detectable during acute rejection (AR), before or after reduction of immunosuppression in kidney transplant recipients who were converted from cyclosporine A (CsA) to the less nephrotoxic azathioprine (AZA) or mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) at 1 year after transplantation.
Methods: Plasma samples were collected before transplantation, at several time points after transplantation, and during AR. Antibodies were measured in 29 patients: 5 patients with AR during the first year after transplantation (before conversion), 14 patients with AR after conversion or dose-reduction of AZA or MMF, and a control group of 10 patients without AR during a follow-up of 2 years (1 year before and 1 year after conversion of immunosuppression). Antibodies were measured by complement-dependent cytotoxicity assay, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and flow-cytometry in a crossmatch with donor spleen cells.
Results: Donor-specific antibodies were not detectable after transplantation in the control group without AR, nor in patients with AR shortly after transplantation during CsA therapy. After conversion from CsA to AZA or MMF, antibodies appeared only in one patient after graft failure followed by transplantectomy and in patients during AR on AZA but not on MMF therapy.
Conclusion: In this patient group, we could not detect donor-specific antibodies during CsA treatment, not even at the time of AR using three different techniques. Donor-specific antibodies were primarily present during AR in patients converted from CsA to AZA and were not found in the sera from patients converted to MMF.