The impact of HLA match transfusions and presensitization on renal transplantation in the cyclosporine era.

1992 
: The successful engraftment of a renal transplant is dependent on multiple factors, immunological factors being of major importance. Specifically, histocompatibility, lymphocytotoxic antibodies and pretransplant blood transfusions have been shown to play a major role in determining graft outcome in renal transplant recipients receiving Azathioprine-Prednisolone immunosuppression. The impact of the immunosuppressive drug, Cyclosporine on graft outcome in relation to established risk factors were examined among 116 cadaveric and 34 living related renal allograft recipients from our center. Histoincompatibility and pretransplant blood transfusions did not significantly affect graft survival among cadaveric transplant recipients. Similarly, graft survival was not significantly different between two haplotype-matched and less well-matched living-related graft recipients (75% versus 96.5% respectively). On the other hand, lymphocytotoxic antibodies remained a major risk factor for immunologically mediated graft loss among cadaveric graft recipients (48.0% versus 92.2% four year graft survival among those with and without antibodies respectively). These results suggest that Cyclosporine has abrogated some immunological risk factors in renal transplantation.
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