Fatal graft-versus-host disease after living-donor liver transplantation from an HLA-DR-mismatched donor.
Keita ShimataRieko SakamotoTadashi AnanKoushi UchidaMasaki HondaMasahiko KourokiTomonari UrabeShintaro HayashidaHidekazu YamamotoYasuhiko SugawaraYukihiro InomataPublished in: Pediatric transplantation (2017)
Acute GVHD is a rare complication after liver transplantation that has a high mortality rate. We experienced an infant case complicated with acute GVHD. An 8-month-old infant with biliary atresia underwent LDLT with a graft obtained from his mother. Their HLAs showed a donor-dominant one-way match, not at HLA-DR but at HLA-A, HLA-B, and HLA-C (recipient; A 31/33, B 51/54, C 1/14, DR 9/11, donor; A 31/-, B 51/-, C 14/-, DR 8/11). The patient exhibited a high fever, skin rash, and diarrhea, and was diagnosed with acute GVHD based on the blood chimerism test. Despite immunosuppression treatment with prednisolone and tacrolimus, plasma exchange, blood transfusion including cord blood transplantation, and antibiotics, the child died on postoperative day 126. Donor-dominant one-way matching at HLA class 1 can be a high-risk factor for acute GVHD despite HLA class 2 mismatching.
Keyphrases
- liver failure
- respiratory failure
- allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- cord blood
- drug induced
- aortic dissection
- editorial comment
- hepatitis b virus
- patients undergoing
- type diabetes
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- acute myeloid leukemia
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- mechanical ventilation
- replacement therapy