BackgroundRecent data suggest that ABO blood group-incompatible donor hearts are immunologically well tolerated in infants undergoing transplantation.MethodsCompeting-risks methodology was used to assess outcomes after listing and the impact of a strategy to accept heart grafts from any blood group donor for infants less than 18 months of age.ResultsFrom 1992 to 2002, there were 91 listing episodes in 84 patients (including 20 fetuses; 50% were male and 63% had congenital heart disease). Beginning in 1995, a strategy to accept ABO-incompatible organs was adopted. Competing-risks analysis showed that after 20 months 60% underwent transplantation, 18% died, and less than 1% were still listed; the remaining 21% were de-listed because of a chan...
Background: ABO incompatible (ABOi) living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) has been proposed to c...
BACKGROUND: Kidney transplant candidates are blood group incompatible with roughly one out of three ...
Active donor infection at the time of organ procurement poses a potential infection risk and may inc...
BackgroundImmunologic incompatibility has implications for primary graft failure, rejection, and sur...
Due to the shortage of organ donors, heart transplantation cannot be offered to many infants with en...
AbstractObjectives: Our institutional experience with 73 pediatric patients undergoing cardiac trans...
INTRODUCTION: ABO blood group compatibility between donors and recipients of heart transplants is re...
Specific B-cell tolerance toward donor blood group antigens develops in infants after ABO-incompatib...
Despite the presence of preformed antibodies against AB oligosaccharide epitopes on the donor vascul...
AbstractThe independent genomic inheritance of the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) and the ABO-blood g...
Despite the astounding technological advancements of modern society, failure to receive a timely org...
In this analysis, we examine a large national cohort within the Organ Procurement and Transplantatio...
Up to 40% of donor-recipient pairs in SCT have some degree of ABO incompatibility, which may cause s...
Infants are a unique transplant population due to a suspected immunologic advantage, in addition to ...
Background: ABOi heart transplant has become routine for the majority of children <2 years old. An 8...
Background: ABO incompatible (ABOi) living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) has been proposed to c...
BACKGROUND: Kidney transplant candidates are blood group incompatible with roughly one out of three ...
Active donor infection at the time of organ procurement poses a potential infection risk and may inc...
BackgroundImmunologic incompatibility has implications for primary graft failure, rejection, and sur...
Due to the shortage of organ donors, heart transplantation cannot be offered to many infants with en...
AbstractObjectives: Our institutional experience with 73 pediatric patients undergoing cardiac trans...
INTRODUCTION: ABO blood group compatibility between donors and recipients of heart transplants is re...
Specific B-cell tolerance toward donor blood group antigens develops in infants after ABO-incompatib...
Despite the presence of preformed antibodies against AB oligosaccharide epitopes on the donor vascul...
AbstractThe independent genomic inheritance of the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) and the ABO-blood g...
Despite the astounding technological advancements of modern society, failure to receive a timely org...
In this analysis, we examine a large national cohort within the Organ Procurement and Transplantatio...
Up to 40% of donor-recipient pairs in SCT have some degree of ABO incompatibility, which may cause s...
Infants are a unique transplant population due to a suspected immunologic advantage, in addition to ...
Background: ABOi heart transplant has become routine for the majority of children <2 years old. An 8...
Background: ABO incompatible (ABOi) living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) has been proposed to c...
BACKGROUND: Kidney transplant candidates are blood group incompatible with roughly one out of three ...
Active donor infection at the time of organ procurement poses a potential infection risk and may inc...