Persistence of donor lymphocytes in liver allograft recipients.

Standard

Persistence of donor lymphocytes in liver allograft recipients. / Schlitt, H J; Kanehiro, H; Raddatz, G; Steinhoff, G; Richter, N; Nashan, Björn; Ringe, B; Wonigeit, K; Pichlmayr, R.

in: TRANSPLANTATION, Jahrgang 56, Nr. 4, 4, 1993, S. 1001-1007.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Schlitt, HJ, Kanehiro, H, Raddatz, G, Steinhoff, G, Richter, N, Nashan, B, Ringe, B, Wonigeit, K & Pichlmayr, R 1993, 'Persistence of donor lymphocytes in liver allograft recipients.', TRANSPLANTATION, Jg. 56, Nr. 4, 4, S. 1001-1007. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7692632?dopt=Citation>

APA

Schlitt, H. J., Kanehiro, H., Raddatz, G., Steinhoff, G., Richter, N., Nashan, B., Ringe, B., Wonigeit, K., & Pichlmayr, R. (1993). Persistence of donor lymphocytes in liver allograft recipients. TRANSPLANTATION, 56(4), 1001-1007. [4]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7692632?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Schlitt HJ, Kanehiro H, Raddatz G, Steinhoff G, Richter N, Nashan B et al. Persistence of donor lymphocytes in liver allograft recipients. TRANSPLANTATION. 1993;56(4):1001-1007. 4.

Bibtex

@article{7f7dbf944cae4056961f1441ffdff77e,
title = "Persistence of donor lymphocytes in liver allograft recipients.",
abstract = "Occasional cases of graft-versus-host disease after liver transplantation indicate a transfer of donor lymphocytes by human liver grafts. However, little is known about the usual fate and potential function of passenger lymphocytes in clinical liver transplantation. In this study, we have analyzed liver graft recipients for the presence of donor lymphocytes in the early course after transplantation. The presence of such cells in blood, the graft, and, occasionally, the skin was studied by the use of mAb to polymorphic HLA class I determinants and double-staining techniques in flow cytometry and immunocytology. The findings were compared with the clinical courses and with the results of routine graft biopsies. Within the first week after transplantation, in all 16 patients, between 1% and 24% donor lymphocytes (T, NK, and B cells) were detectable in blood, and in 14 of 22 patients (64%), between 2% and 23% donor T cells were found in the graft. After more than 2 weeks, donor cells were still present in blood in 2 of 14 patients at very low numbers. The presence of donor lymphocytes in the graft was associated with intragraft immune activation in 5 of 15 patients, but no clinical rejection occurred in these cases; mild graft-versus-host disease was observed in one patient. These findings demonstrate that donor lymphocytes regularly persist in liver-grafted patients for some time; this transient mixed lymphoid chimerism is only rarely associated with clinical graft-versus-host disease and some evidence even suggests that these donor-derived lymphocytes may exert beneficial immunomodulatory properties.",
author = "Schlitt, {H J} and H Kanehiro and G Raddatz and G Steinhoff and N Richter and Bj{\"o}rn Nashan and B Ringe and K Wonigeit and R Pichlmayr",
year = "1993",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "56",
pages = "1001--1007",
journal = "TRANSPLANTATION",
issn = "0041-1337",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams and Wilkins",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Persistence of donor lymphocytes in liver allograft recipients.

AU - Schlitt, H J

AU - Kanehiro, H

AU - Raddatz, G

AU - Steinhoff, G

AU - Richter, N

AU - Nashan, Björn

AU - Ringe, B

AU - Wonigeit, K

AU - Pichlmayr, R

PY - 1993

Y1 - 1993

N2 - Occasional cases of graft-versus-host disease after liver transplantation indicate a transfer of donor lymphocytes by human liver grafts. However, little is known about the usual fate and potential function of passenger lymphocytes in clinical liver transplantation. In this study, we have analyzed liver graft recipients for the presence of donor lymphocytes in the early course after transplantation. The presence of such cells in blood, the graft, and, occasionally, the skin was studied by the use of mAb to polymorphic HLA class I determinants and double-staining techniques in flow cytometry and immunocytology. The findings were compared with the clinical courses and with the results of routine graft biopsies. Within the first week after transplantation, in all 16 patients, between 1% and 24% donor lymphocytes (T, NK, and B cells) were detectable in blood, and in 14 of 22 patients (64%), between 2% and 23% donor T cells were found in the graft. After more than 2 weeks, donor cells were still present in blood in 2 of 14 patients at very low numbers. The presence of donor lymphocytes in the graft was associated with intragraft immune activation in 5 of 15 patients, but no clinical rejection occurred in these cases; mild graft-versus-host disease was observed in one patient. These findings demonstrate that donor lymphocytes regularly persist in liver-grafted patients for some time; this transient mixed lymphoid chimerism is only rarely associated with clinical graft-versus-host disease and some evidence even suggests that these donor-derived lymphocytes may exert beneficial immunomodulatory properties.

AB - Occasional cases of graft-versus-host disease after liver transplantation indicate a transfer of donor lymphocytes by human liver grafts. However, little is known about the usual fate and potential function of passenger lymphocytes in clinical liver transplantation. In this study, we have analyzed liver graft recipients for the presence of donor lymphocytes in the early course after transplantation. The presence of such cells in blood, the graft, and, occasionally, the skin was studied by the use of mAb to polymorphic HLA class I determinants and double-staining techniques in flow cytometry and immunocytology. The findings were compared with the clinical courses and with the results of routine graft biopsies. Within the first week after transplantation, in all 16 patients, between 1% and 24% donor lymphocytes (T, NK, and B cells) were detectable in blood, and in 14 of 22 patients (64%), between 2% and 23% donor T cells were found in the graft. After more than 2 weeks, donor cells were still present in blood in 2 of 14 patients at very low numbers. The presence of donor lymphocytes in the graft was associated with intragraft immune activation in 5 of 15 patients, but no clinical rejection occurred in these cases; mild graft-versus-host disease was observed in one patient. These findings demonstrate that donor lymphocytes regularly persist in liver-grafted patients for some time; this transient mixed lymphoid chimerism is only rarely associated with clinical graft-versus-host disease and some evidence even suggests that these donor-derived lymphocytes may exert beneficial immunomodulatory properties.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 56

SP - 1001

EP - 1007

JO - TRANSPLANTATION

JF - TRANSPLANTATION

SN - 0041-1337

IS - 4

M1 - 4

ER -