It is unknown whether some donor specific antibodies (DSA) can be crossed at the time of lung transplant without desensitization or augmented induction immunosuppression. This study assessed whether crossing low-level pre-transplant DSA (defined as mean fluorescence intensity [MFI] 1000-6000) without augmented immunosuppression is associated with worse retransplant-free or chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD)-free survival. Of the 458 included recipients, low-level pre-transplant DSA was crossed in 39 (8.6%) patients. The median follow-up time was 2.2 years. There were 15 (38.5%) patients with Class I DSA and 24 (61.5%) with Class II DSA. There was no difference in adjusted overall retransplant-free survival between recipients where pre-transplant DSA was and was not crossed (HR: .98 [95% CI = .49-1.99], P = .96). There was also no difference in CLAD-free survival (HR: .71 [95% CI = .38-1.33], P = .28). There was no difference in Grade 3 PGD at 72 h (OR: 1.13 [95% CI = .52-2.48], P = .75) or definite or probable AMR (HR: 2.22 [95% CI = .64-7.61], P = .21). Lung transplantation in the presence of low-level DSA without planned augmented immunosuppression is not associated with worse overall or CLAD-free survival among recipients with intermediate-term follow-up.
Keywords: antibody mediated rejection; chronic lung allograft dysfunction; donor specific antibodies; lung transplantation; primary graft dysfunction; survival.
© 2021 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.