Background: Various studies have reported poorer graft survival among individuals displaying T-cell-positive flow cytometry crossmatches (FCXM). Good outcomes have been observed in immunologically high-risk patients with the use of rituximab, plasmapheresis, and γ-globulin. Because the relevance of FCXM B-cell-positivity (BCXM (+)) alone remains controversial, we examined its impact on living donor renal transplantations.
Patients and methods: We retrospectively studied 146 adult renal transplantation recipients from April 2007 to June 2012, dividing the patients into BCXM (+) (n = 31) versus BCXM (-) recipients (n = 115). We examined patient and graft survivals as well as rejection rates at 0 to 3, 3 to 12, and 12 to 24 months. We also determined the incidence of infectious diseases. We performed stepwise multivariate regression to identify risk factors contributing rejection episodes.
Results: One-year patient and graft survivals were 100% in both groups. The BCXM (-) group have a 16.8% rejection probability whereas the BCXM (+) group, 33.2% (P = .201). There were no significantly differences in the incidence of infectious diseases. Only the rate of a sensitizing history was an independent risk factor for a rejection episode.
Conclusion: BCXM (+) showed only a tendency but not a significant impact on rejection episodes compared with BCXM (-); short-term graft survivals were similar.
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