Background: Candidates for combined liver-kidney transplant frequently present pretransplant HLA sensitization in most cases related to elevated prior transfusion requirements. The urgency criterion and the evidence of the protective effect at the immunologic level of the liver graft open the possibility of carrying out the combined transplant in patients with an incompatible crossmatch. The single-center experience presented here describes the patient profile and kidney graft evolution observed in this highly sensitized group.
Methods: Descriptive study of a series of 4 cases of patients with positive crossmatch results who received a simultaneous liver-kidney transplant at our center. Demographic characteristics and clinical information were collected and detailed.
Results: Before the transplant, 2 patients presented HLA class I antibodies and the other 2 showed both class I and II. The post-transplant crossmatch result was negative in 2 of the 4 patients. All received induction with Thymoglobulin. In the 2 patients in whom the crossmatch remained positive, treatment with plasmapheresis, intravenous immunoglobulins and rituximab was initiated, after which the crossmatch resulted negative. During follow-up, anti-HLA antibodies were monitored, with the presence of mainly class I antibodies with variable mean fluorescence intensity being detected in all but 1 patient. Renal graft function remained stable throughout the tracing without objectifying histologic signs of rejection during the first 6 months of evolution.
Conclusions: In our experience, combined liver-kidney transplant in sensitized patients with an incompatible crossmatching test has presented satisfactory outcomes. Close clinical and analytical monitoring is essential.
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