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Transplantation Pathology
Kristine Krafts, M.D.
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Transplantation Outline
Introduction Graft compatibility Graft rejection Types of organ transplantation
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Transplantation Outline
Introduction
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Definitions Transplantation the moving of cells, tissues, and organs from one site to another Graft the transplanted organ Donor person from whom graft is taken Recipient (host) person who gets the graft
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Transplantable Things
Kidney Pancreas Heart Lung Liver Bone marrow Intestine Skin Cornea
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Transplantation Problems
Surgical difficulties Graft rejection Organ shortage
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Transplantation Outline
Introduction Graft compatibility
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Compatibility Rejection recipient recognizes graft as foreign, and destroys it Autograft within same person Isograft between identical twins Allograft between genetically different people Xenograft between different species
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Histocompatibility Histocompatible: antigenically similar
Histoincompatible: antigenically different MHC antigens are the most important ABO antigens are also important
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HLA Complex Gene collection on chromosome 6
Three regions: class I, class II, class III Class I gene products expressed on nearly all cells present antigen to TC cells Class II gene products expressed on antigen-presenting cells present antigen to TH cells
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MHC genes on chromosome 6 = “haplotype”
♂ ♀ ♂ ♀ MHC genes on chromosome 6 = “haplotype”
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HLA genes are inherited as sets (haplotypes)
♂ ♀ parents four possible haplotype combinations in children
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HLA genes are polymorphic
♂ ♀ A B C DR DQ DP 1 7 w Dad’s HLA genes 2 8 w 3 44 w Mom’s HLA genes 11 35 w
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If HLA genes were foods…
ice cream yum yum pop fruit cookie veggie a b Dew haplotypes Vault c d
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HLA genes are codominantly expressed
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HLA Matching The more matching alleles between donor and host, the better! Matching the class II antigens is more important than matching the class I antigens. One or two class I mismatches = no big deal One or two class II mismatches = big deal Mismatches in both class I and II = very big deal
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time after transplant, months
100 number of mismatches Class I Class II 1 or 2 3 or 4 graft survival, % 50 3 6 12 time after transplant, months
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Transplantation Outline
Introduction Graft compatibility Graft rejection
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Graft Rejection Any two people (except identical twins) will express some HLA proteins that are different. Every recipient will recognize, and react against, at least some foreign antigens in the graft Rejection is complex, with lots of killing mechanisms.
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How does rejection happen?
T-cell-mediated rejection Antibody-mediated rejection
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CTL Killing
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Antibody-Mediated Rejection
Preformed antibodies: within hours Newly-made antibodies: days – years later
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Clinical Types of Rejection
Hyperacute rejection Acute rejection Chronic rejection
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Hyperacute Rejection Within hours Preexisting anti-donor antibodies
Rare these days
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Acute Rejection Starts at about 10 days Cell-mediated
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Chronic Rejection Months to years after transplant
Humoral and cell-mediated mechanisms Hard to prevent Hard to treat
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Transplantation Outline
Introduction Graft compatibility Graft rejection Types of organ transplantation
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Kidney Transplantation
Diabetes, glomerulonephritis, congenital disorders Most commonly transplanted organ Problems: host sensitization post-transplant malignancy
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Heart Transplantation
Cardiomyopathy, myocarditis, congenital defects, ischemic disease Must use heart-lung machine Problems: organ shortage maintaining graft before transplant post-transplant lymphoma
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Bone Marrow Transplantation
Leukemia, lymphoma Find living donor (easy) that matches (hard) Massive chemo/radiation first Problem: GVHD
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Graft-vs-Host Disease
Donor T cells see recipient as foreign! Attack skin, GI, liver Treat with immunosuppressive drugs Or, partially deplete donor marrow of T cells
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Graft-vs-host disease, skin lesions
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