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      Skewing of pretransplant anti-HLA class I antibodies of immunoglobulin G isotype solely toward immunoglobulin G1 subclass is associated with poorer renal allograft survival.

      1 , , ,
      Transplantation

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          Abstract

          Sensitized patients with lymphocytotoxic immunoglobulin (Ig)G anti-human leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibodies have an increased risk of rejection and poorer graft survival. Little is known, however, about the correlation between IgG antibody subclass and clinical outcomes. We identified 20 sensitized renal transplant recipients (panel reactive antibody >15%), all of whom had anti-HLA class I antibodies of an IgG isotype with known specificity before transplantation but who received a crossmatch negative graft. We analyzed the degree of skewing solely toward IgG1 (n=11) or to other IgG subclasses with or without IgG1 (n=9) and correlated these findings with graft survival. At last follow-up (median follow-up 28 months), 6 of 11 patients (55%) with anti-HLA antibodies skewed toward IgG1 had lost their grafts compared with 0 of 9 patients (0%) with anti-HLA antibodies not skewed toward IgG1 (P =0.01 log-rank test). Anti-HLA antibodies of an IgG1 subclass may be a novel marker predicting poor graft outcome.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Transplantation
          Transplantation
          0041-1337
          0041-1337
          Jun 15 2004
          : 77
          : 11
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Immunology, Imperial College London, Hammersmith Campus, London, United Kingdom.
          Article
          00007890-200406150-00026
          10.1097/01.TP.0000129408.07168.40
          15201682
          b91215ad-c442-4664-8be6-7fb13ced569d
          History

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