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Am J Transplant ; 3(4): 459-64, 2003 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12694069

ABSTRACT

The points now assigned for the quality of HLA match have received significant scrutiny to be modified in an effort to help reduce disparity in access to kidneys of minority groups, and since differences in graft survival between groups of patients in each of the HLA matched groups is less now than in the past. We analyzed long-term (5-year) graft survival in 746 DR DNA typed recipients of cadaveric kidneys transplanted from 1994-2001 whose donors were also DR DNA typed, with allocation based on those DNA-based typings. Five-year graft survival was not significantly different for recipient groups irrespective of if they had zero (84%), one (92%), two (89%), or three to four B, DR mismatches (79%) (log-rank = 0.15; died with a functioning graft [DWFG] censored). Mismatching of three and four DR and DQ antigens in black but not white patients was associated with significantly worse survival (Relative Risk = 2.9) (p = 0.002). The incidence of minority transplants in the well-matched group (zero and one B, DR mismatch), 12.8% (20/156) was over half that of the less well-matched group, 27.1% (160/590) (p < 0.001). Our data indicate that the current HLA-B, DR-based point system used to allocate kidneys warrants re-evaluation. Our data, taken in the context of the UNOS data, which has recently been re-evaluated, suggest that the only HLA-DR remain as a component of the national kidney allocation algorithm so as to increase access of kidneys to minorities and minimize graft loss.


Subject(s)
Cadaver , Histocompatibility Antigens Class II/immunology , Kidney Transplantation/immunology , Tissue and Organ Procurement , Female , Graft Survival , Histocompatibility Testing , Humans , Male , Polymerase Chain Reaction
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