HLA matching between donors and recipients improves clinical liver transplant graft survival

Author:

Nabulsi Sarah1,Otunla Afolarin A.2ORCID,Salciccioli Justin3,Marshall Dominic C.4,Villani Vincenzo5,Shanmugarajah Kumaran6,Shalhoub Joseph78

Affiliation:

1. Department of Life Sciences Imperial College London London UK

2. North Middlesex University Hospitals London UK

3. Department of Critical Care Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Surgery & Cancer Imperial College London London UK

5. Department of Transplantation Memorial Hermann Health System Houston Texas USA

6. Department of Surgery University of Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

7. Academic Section of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery & Cancer Imperial College London London UK

8. Imperial Vascular Unit Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust London UK

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsThe importance of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) matching between liver transplant donors and recipients on graft survival remains unclear and is not a clinical consideration in liver transplantation. This study aimed to determine the relationship between HLA matching and liver graft survival using a large‐scale multi‐centre database (UNOS/OPTN) and multivariate logistic analysis. The secondary aim was to determine whether this relationship was influenced by transplant indication and donor status.MethodsThis retrospective observational analysis was performed using 22 702 liver transplant recipients from the UNOS/OPTN database. Patients were divided into two groups based on number of HLA mismatches (0–3 mismatches vs. 4–6 mismatches) and then subcategorized by indication and donor status. Risk‐adjusted outcomes were assessed by multivariate Cox analysis adjusting for donor and recipient characteristics and visualized using Kaplan–Meier survival curves.ResultsAllograft survival and risk of acute rejection were associated with degree of HLA mismatch. This association between HLA mismatch and graft survival persisted in individuals who underwent transplant for hepatitis, metabolic, drug toxicity, and congenital indications. Donor status also influenced the relationship between HLA mismatch and graft survival. Graft survival in DBD recipients was longer than in DCD in the 4–6 HLA mismatch group, whereas no significant difference was found in the 0–3 HLA mismatch group.ConclusionHLA mismatch significantly reduced graft survival and increased risk of acute rejection. This association was noted only in specific indications. These findings are of potential clinical relevance to organ allocation, allograft matching algorithms, immunosuppression protocols, and transplant surveillance.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hepatology

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