Methods. We investigated the presence of chimerism in renal allografts of ABO-incompatible kidney transplantation recipients by immunohistochemical detection of blood type A and B antigens and assessed the association between chimerism, the clinical course, and histopathological changes. Among a total of 56 patients (29 blood group A incompatible and 27 blood group B incompatible), 49 cases (28 blood group A incompatible and 21 blood group B incompatible) were enrolled in this study. Blood group antigens were stained using immunohistochemistry.
Results. Twelve of the 49 patients (12/49, 24.5%) exhibited endothelium chimerism in a biopsy sample. Among the 12 patients with endothelium chimerism, 7 patients (7/12, 59%) had acute and chronic active antibody-mediated rejection and 2 patients (2/12, 17%) had severe calcineurin inhibitor toxicity. The graft survival rate in the chimerism group was significantly lower than that in the no-chimerism group ([chimerism vs. no-chimerism] 3 years, 83.3% vs. 97.1%; 5 years, 74.1% vs. 97.1%; 8 years, 46.3% vs. 97.1%; P<0.0001).
Conclusions. Endothelial chimerism seems to be a hallmark of vigorous immune or nonimmune responses, such as antibody-mediated rejection or calcineurin inhibitor toxicity, and not of the induction of tolerance (read more). Print this post
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