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Antibody Therapeutics as Interfering Agents in Flow Cytometry Crossmatch for Organ Transplantation.

Michael L KuehtLaxmi Priya DongurMuhammad A MujtabaMatthew F Cusick
Published in: Journal of personalized medicine (2023)
Donor-recipient matching is a highly individualized and complex component of solid organ transplantation. Flowcytometry crossmatching (FC-XM) is an integral step in the matching process that is used to detect pre-formed deleterious anti-donor immunoglobulin. Despite high sensitivity in detecting cell-bound immunoglobulin, FC-XM is not able to determine the source or function of immunoglobulins detected. Monoclonal antibody therapeutic agents used in a clinic can interfere with the interpretation of FC-XM. We combined data from the prospectively maintained Antibody Society database and Human Protein Atlas with a comprehensive literature review of PubMed to summarize known FC-XM-interfering antibody therapeutics and identify potential interferers. We identified eight unique FC-XM-interfering antibody therapeutics. Rituximab (anti-CD20) was the most-cited agent. Daratumuab (anti-CD38) was the newest reported agent. We identified 43 unreported antibody therapeutics that may interfere with FC-XM. As antibody therapeutic agents become more common, identifying and mitigating FC-XM interference will likely become an increased focus for transplant centers.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • flow cytometry
  • monoclonal antibody
  • endothelial cells
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • primary care
  • stem cells
  • machine learning
  • case report
  • protein protein
  • artificial intelligence