Ye Y, Luo Y, Kobayashi T, Taniguchi S, Li S, Niekrasz M, Kosanke S, Baker J, Mieles L, Smith D
Oklahoma Transplantation Institute, Oklahoma University Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City 73112, USA.
Transplantation. 1995 Jul 15;60(1):19-22. doi: 10.1097/00007890-199507150-00004.
It remains uncertain whether xenotransplantation can sensitize the recipient to alloantigens, rendering subsequent allotransplantation unsuccessful. This is of considerable importance if a xenograft is to be used as a "bridge" to support the patient until a suitable allograft becomes available. When sera from 9 baboons that had received pig or African green monkey heart or liver xenografts were tested against a panel of lymphocytes from 5 or 6 potential donor baboons, positivity was seen in only 1 baboon (and then to only 2 of the potential 5 donors). In 4 baboons that had undergone previous xenotransplants (1 from this series of 9 baboons and 3 others), subsequent organ allografting was not followed by hyperacute, antibody-mediated, or accelerated cellular rejection. We conclude that organ xenotransplantation using discordant or concordant donor species does not prohibit subsequent allotransplantation.