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Efficacy of 2 Doses of Rituximab on B-Cell and Antidonor Antibody and Outcomes of ABO-Incompatible Living-Donor Pediatric Kidney Transplant.

Authors :
Hamasaki Y
Aikawa A
Itabashi Y
Muramatsu M
Hyoudou Y
Shinoda K
Takahashi Y
Sakurabayashi K
Mizutani T
Oguchi H
Kawamura T
Sakai K
Shishido S
Source :
Experimental and clinical transplantation : official journal of the Middle East Society for Organ Transplantation [Exp Clin Transplant] 2019 Jan; Vol. 17 (Suppl 1), pp. 105-109.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Objectives: Rituximab treatment strategies vary in ABOincompatible pediatric kidney transplant recipients. Here, we present the efficacy of 2 doses of rituximab and subsequent outcomes in ABO-incompatible pediatric kidney transplant patients.<br />Materials and Methods: Our study of ABO-incompatible pediatric kidney transplant recipients included 21 who were pretreated with desensitization that included 2 doses of 100 mg rituximab (rituximab group) at 10 and 1 day pretransplant and 14 who received splenectomy without rituximab (splenectomy group). Both groups received immunosuppression. Basiliximab was administered during transplant and 4 days posttransplant. Double-filtration plasmapheresis and/or plasma exchange procedures were performed pretransplant in those with higher antidonor antibody titers. CD19-positive and CD20-positive B cells were measured sequentially in the rituximab group. Maximum titers of antidonor antibody pre- and posttransplant, patient and graft survival, biopsy-proven rejection, and complications/infections were compared between groups.<br />Results: In the rituximab group, CD19- and CD20-positive B cells were depleted on transplant, persistently depleted at 3 months, and under 5% until 1 year posttransplant. Maximum titers of antidonor antibodies decreased significantly posttranplant in the rituximab (P < .001) but not in the splenectomy group (P = .174), with maximum titers posttransplant significantly lower than shown in the splenectomy group (P < .001). No rituximab patients had clinical rejection, but 5 splenectomy group patients had clinical T-cell-mediated rejection, with 2 also having antibody-mediated rejection. Six in the rituximab group had cytomegalovirus viremia but no cytomegalovirus disease; however, 5 splenectomy group recipients had cytomegalovirus disease and viremia. In the rituximab group, 3 had late-onset neutropenia. One child died of hypertrophic cardio myopathy with a functioning graft; all others survived with no failed grafts. All splenectomy group children survived, although 2 had deteriorated graft function.<br />Conclusions: Two doses of rituximab were effective in long-term B-cell depletion to suppress antidonor antibodies. The possibility of late-onset neutropenia must be considered.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2146-8427
Volume :
17
Issue :
Suppl 1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Experimental and clinical transplantation : official journal of the Middle East Society for Organ Transplantation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30777532
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.6002/ect.MESOT2018.O43