ABSTRACT
High anti-blood group A or B (anti-A/B) immunoglobulin G (IgG) haemagglutination titres are associated with poor graft survival in ABO-unmatched liver transplantation. We have previously reported that the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) method can be used to measure anti-A/B IgG levels in the plasma very quickly and quantitatively. The aim of this study was to brush up this SPR method. The anti-A/B IgG antibodies (Abs) were purified from the plasma of healthy volunteers by affinity chromatography and used to establish standard curves for the SPR and flow cytometry (FCM) methods. The haemagglutination test tube (TT), FCM and SPR methods were then used to measure the changes over time in the anti-A/B IgG titres of 25 ABO-unmatched living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) recipients. The standard curve permitted the SPR values for the anti-A/B IgG titres to be expressed in microg mL(-1) units. The SPR measurements of the anti-A/B IgG levels in the LDLT recipients correlated very well with the FCM values, whereas the TT values correlated poorly with either method. Furthermore, the SPR method accurately detected the effects of plasma exchange. In conclusion, the SPR method is an accurate, time- and labour-saving method for measuring anti-A/B IgG titres that can be easily standardized.
Subject(s)
ABO Blood-Group System/immunology , Blood Grouping and Crossmatching/methods , Immunoglobulin G/blood , Liver Transplantation/immunology , Surface Plasmon Resonance/methods , Blood Grouping and Crossmatching/instrumentation , Humans , Immunoglobulin M/blood , Plasma Exchange , Transplantation, Homologous/immunologyABSTRACT
Among 27 patients who received minor ABO-incompatible partial liver transplantations and 19 who received major ABO-incompatible partial liver transplantations from living donors, 2 developed hemolytic anemia within 2 weeks after transplantation. These 2 patients had received livers from their living fathers whose blood type was ABO-incompatible. B-to-A transplantation was performed in patient 1 and O-to-B transplantation was performed in patient 2. Anti-A IgM and IgG were detected in the serum of patient 1, and anti-B IgM and IgG were detected in the serum of patient 2. These antibodies were eluted from the red blood cells of the patients. The coexistence of donor-specific DNA in the peripheral blood of the patients proved that they had chimerism, and graft-versus-host antibody production due to passenger B lymphocytes in the donor's liver was subsequently confirmed.