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. 1997 Nov 4;96(9 Suppl):II-148-53.

Influence of acute rejection episodes, HLA matching, and donor/recipient phenotype on the development of 'early' transplant-associated coronary artery disease

Affiliations
  • PMID: 9386090

Influence of acute rejection episodes, HLA matching, and donor/recipient phenotype on the development of 'early' transplant-associated coronary artery disease

P Hornick et al. Circulation. .

Abstract

Background: Transplant-associated coronary artery disease (TxCAD) is the manifestation of chronic rejection in the cardiac allograft. Both immunological and nonimmunological factors contribute to its development. Stratification by the time of development of TxCAD has not been considered previously for an extensive transplant series and may provide a means for apportioning relative risk factors appropriately. Specifically, TxCAD that develops early may have a pathogenesis different from TxCAD that develops later; ie, immunological factors play a more significant role in early development of TxCAD compared with later forms of the disease or in recipients where it has not been found.

Methods and results: Between 1980 and 1994, 550 heart transplant recipients with postmortem data or yearly angiograms, donor:recipient serological HLA typing, and biopsy data were reviewed. Recipients were divided into four groups: Very Early (<1 year), Early (1-2 years), Late (3-14 years), and None (clear angio >3 years). There was a significant association between the number of histologically proven acute rejection episodes within 3 months and at 1 year and the development of early TxCAD. The number of acute rejection episodes within 3 months and 1 year is also significantly related to freedom of development of TxCAD. There was no significant association between the mean number of mismatches for Class I or Class II antigens, nor could any Class I/II phenotype for recipient or donor be identified that exerted a protective or deleterious effect. A lack of any association or trend with HLA data is demonstrated.

Conclusions: These differences in pathogenesis between early and late TxCAD help define the importance of acute rejection in the etiology of chronic cardiac rejection. Stratification by time of development of TxCAD may provide further insight into defining the relative importance of other risk factors associated with the development of TxCAD. The lack of association with HLA data is discussed.

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