A single dose of 13-valent conjugate pneumococcal vaccine elicits increased titers and breadth of functional anti-pneumococcal antibodies in kidney transplant recipients without stimulating rejection or donor-specific antibodies.
Antibody‐mediated rejection, whereby transplant recipient B cells and/or plasma cells produce alloreactive anti‐human leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibodies, negatively influences transplant outcomes and is a major contributor to graft loss. An early humoral immune response is suggested by the production of anti‐HLA donor‐specific antibodies (DSA) that can be measured using solid phase assays. We report the early posttransplant coexistence of a shared anti‐HLA antibody profile in 5 solid organ transplant recipients who received organs from the same donor. Retrospective analysis of the donor's serum confirmed the presence of the same anti‐HLA profile, suggesting the transfer of donor‐derived anti‐HLA antibodies, or the cells that produce them, to multiple solid organ transplant recipients. The time frame and extent of transfer suggest a novel variant of the passenger lymphocyte syndrome. These findings have important implications for the consideration of all posttransplant antibody measurements, particularly the interpretation of non‐DSAs in the sera of transplant recipients.
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