We studied 27 liver transplants in 24 patients performed between November 1984 and January 1988. We investigated retrospectively the importance of donor reactive HLA class I and class II and of non-HLA antibodies for graft survival in these patients. In order to determine the specificity and class of the antibodies, we used monoclonal antibodies to HLA-A, -B, -C and DR and DQ antigens to block cytotoxicity of sera and the reagent dithiothreitol to characterize the immunoglobulin class. We found that humoral immunity to HLA antigens in liver-grafted patients, demonstrable as the presence of cytotoxic antibodies reactive with donor splenic T and/or B cells in the pretransplantation period, is associated with significantly lower graft survival as compared with patients without demonstrable preformed HLA antibodies (P = 0.01). In addition we found that a substantial proportion of patients had donor-reactive cytotoxic antibodies which were not HLA specific. Thus, our study shows that HLA immunity can influence liver allograft survival, and that it is useful to have patient cytotoxic antibodies characterized with regard to HLA reactivity prior to transplantation.
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