Effect of Apheresis for ABO and HLA Desensitization on Anti-Measles Antibody Titers in Renal Transplantation
Author(s) -
Ulf Schönermarck,
Teresa Kauke,
Gundula Jäger,
Antje Habicht,
Thorsten Wendler,
Joachim Andrassy,
Markus Guba,
Manfred Stangl,
Michael Fischereder
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of transplantation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-0015
pISSN - 2090-0007
DOI - 10.1155/2011/869065
Subject(s) - medicine , measles , apheresis , desensitization (medicine) , immunology , immunoadsorption , plasmapheresis , abo blood group system , rituximab , titer , transplantation , antibody , immunity , antibody titer , vaccination , immune system , platelet , receptor
Desensitization strategies for ABO-incompatible renal transplants with plasma exchange (PE) or specific immunoadsorption (IA) decrease immunoglobulin levels. After recent measles outbreak and decreasing vaccination rates, we studied the impact of apheresis on anti-measles antibodies. Anti-measles antibodies were measured before desensitization, before transplantation and during followup in 12 patients with ABO incompatibility (2x PE only, 8x IA only, and 2x IA and PE) and 3 patients with donor-specific HLA antibodies (all PE). Patients received rituximab, IVIG, and standard immunosuppressive therapy. All patients had detectable anti-measles antibodies before desensitization (mean 3238 mU/l, range 560–8100). After 3–6 PE sessions, titers decreased significantly to 1710 mU/l ( P < 0.05), in one patient to nondetectable values, while IA only maintained protective titers. After a median followup of 64 days, anti-measles antibodies returned to baseline in all patients. Immunity against measles was temporarily reduced by apheresis but remained detectable in most patients at time of transplantation. Desensitization maintains long-term protective immunity against measles.
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