Comprehensive and accurate human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing within a short turnaround time is a crucial initial step for allocating deceased donor organs for transplantation. Erroneous HLA typing of deceased donors can be catastrophic and result in recipient death, failed transplant, and organ wastage due to inappropriately matched donors. The real-time polymerase chain reaction method is widely used as the sole method for HLA typing of deceased donors because of its simplified workflow. Herein, we have reported cases of four deceased donors showing discrepant HLA typing discovered using two independent methods concurrently. The HLA typing of these donors could have been erroneously reported if a single method had been used, which would have profound patient safety implications. In one case, the drop out of HLA-DR7 using a single method could have resulted in harmful organ allocation if the organ was transplanted after a virtual crossmatch to a sensitized candidate showing strong donor-specific HLA-DR7 antibodies. In conclusion, this case series suggests that concurrent dual typing is essential for accurate HLA typing of deceased donors. This strategy is vital because precise HLA typing is critical for accurate virtual crossmatching, which facilitates continuous distribution and broader geographic sharing of the deceased donor organ.
Keywords: Allelic dropout; Ambiguous HLA typing; Deceased donor organ; HLA typing; HLA typing discrepancy; Histocompatibility; Organ allocation; Organ transplantation; Virtual crossmatch.
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