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AuthorPiyanuch, Kongtim
AuthorVittayawacharin, Pongthep
AuthorZou, Jun
AuthorSrour, Samer
AuthorShaffer, Brian
AuthorShapiro, Roman M.
AuthorVarma, Ankur
AuthorMcGuirk, Joseph
AuthorDholaria, Bhagirathbhai R.
AuthorMcCurdy, Shannon R.
AuthorDeZern, Amy E.
AuthorBejanyan, Nelli
AuthorBashey, Asad
AuthorFurst, Sabine
AuthorCastagna, Luca
AuthorMariotti, Jacopo
AuthorRuggeri, Annalisa
AuthorBailen, Rebeca
AuthorTeshima, Takanori
AuthorXiao-Jun, Huang
AuthorBonfim, Carmen
AuthorAung, Fleur
AuthorCao, Kai
AuthorCarpenter, Paul A.
AuthorHamadani, Mehdi
AuthorAskar, Medhat
AuthorFernandez-Vina, Marcelo
AuthorGirnita, Alin
AuthorCiurea, Stefan O.
Available date2025-04-28T06:34:49Z
Publication Date2024-12
Publication NameTransplantation and Cellular Therapy
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtct.2024.09.005
CitationKongtim, P., Vittayawacharin, P., Zou, J., Srour, S., Shaffer, B., Shapiro, R. M., ... & Ciurea, S. O. (2024). ASTCT Consensus Recommendations on Testing and Treatment of Patients with Donor-specific Anti-HLA Antibodies. Transplantation and Cellular Therapy, 30(12), 1139-1154.
ISSN2666-6375
URIhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666636724006547
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/64525
AbstractDonor-specific anti-HLA antibodies (DSA) are an important cause of engraftment failure and may negatively impact survival outcomes of patients receiving allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) using an HLA-mismatched allograft. The incidence of DSA varies across studies, depending on individual factors, detection or identification methods and thresholds considered clinically relevant. Although DSA testing by multiplex bead arrays remains semiquantitative, it has been widely adopted as a standard test in most transplant centers. Additional testing to determine risk of allograft rejection may include assays with HLA antigens in natural conformation, such as flow cytometric crossmatch, and/or antibody binding assays, such as C1q testing. Patients with low level of DSA (<2,000 mean fluorescence intensity; MFI) may not require treatment, while others with very high level of DSA (>20,000 MFI) may be at very high-risk for engraftment failure despite current therapies. By contrast, in patients with moderate or high level of DSA, desensitization therapy can successfully mitigate DSA levels and improve donor cell engraftment rate, with comparable outcomes to patients without DSA. Treatment is largely empirical and multimodal, involving the removal, neutralization, and blocking of antibodies, as well as inhibition of antibody production to prevent activation of the complement cascade. Desensitization protocols are based on accumulated multicenter experience, while prospective multicenter studies remain lacking. Most patients require a full intensity protocol that includes plasma exchange, while protocols relying only on rituximab and intravenous immunoglobulin may be sufficient for patients with lower DSA levels and negative C1q and/or flow cytometric crossmatch. Monitoring DSA levels before and after HSCT could guide preemptive treatment when high levels persist after stem cell infusion. This paper aims to standardize current evidence-based practice and formulate future directions to improve upon current knowledge and advance treatment for this relatively rare, but potentially serious complication in allogeneic HSCT recipients. © 2024 The American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy
Languageen
PublisherElsevier
SubjectDonor-specific anti HLA antibodies
graft failure
poor graft function
allogeneic stem cell transplantation
haploidentical stem cell transplantation
cord blood transplantation
mismatched unrelated donor transplantation
treatment related mortality
treatment guidelines
TitleASTCT Consensus Recommendations on Testing and Treatment of Patients with Donor-specific Anti-HLA Antibodies
TypeArticle
Pagination1139-1154
Issue Number12
Volume Number30
ESSN2666-6367
dc.accessType Full Text


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