Transplant rejection: MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia (2024)

Transplant rejection is a process in which a transplant recipient's immune system attacks the transplanted organ or tissue.

Causes

Your body's immune system usually protects you from substances that may be harmful, such as germs, poisons, and sometimes, cancer cells.

These harmful substances have proteins called antigens coating their surfaces. As soon as these antigens enter the body, the immune system recognizes that they are not from that person's body and that they are "foreign," and attacks them.

When a person receives an organ from someone else during transplant surgery, that person's immune system may recognize that it is foreign. This is because the person's immune system detects that the antigens on the cells of the organ are different or not "matched." Mismatched organs, or organs that are not matched closely enough, can trigger a blood transfusion reaction or transplant rejection.

To help prevent this reaction, doctors type, or match both the organ donor and the person who is receiving the organ. The more similar the antigens are between the donor and recipient, the less likely that the organ will be rejected.

Tissue typing ensures that the organ or tissue is as similar as possible to the tissues of the recipient. The match is usually not perfect. No two people, except identical twins, have identical tissue antigens.

Doctors use medicines to suppress the recipient's immune system. The goal is to prevent the immune system from attacking the newly transplanted organ. If these medicines are not used, the body will almost always launch an immune response and destroy the foreign tissue.

There are some exceptions, though. Cornea transplants are rarely rejected because the cornea has no blood supply. Also, transplants from one identical twin to another are almost never rejected.

There are three types of rejection:

  • Hyperacute rejection occurs a few minutes after the transplant when the antigens are completely unmatched. The tissue must be removed right away so the recipient does not die. This type of rejection is seen when a recipient is given the wrong type of blood. For example, when a person is given type A blood when he or she is type B.
  • Acute rejection may occur any time from the first week after the transplant to 3 months afterward. All recipients have some amount of acute rejection.
  • Chronic rejection can take place over many years. The body's constant immune response against the new organ slowly damages the transplanted tissues or organ.

Symptoms

Symptoms may include:

  • The organ's function may start to decrease
  • General discomfort, uneasiness, or ill feeling
  • Pain or swelling in the area of the organ (rare)
  • Fever (rare)
  • Flu-like symptoms, including chills, body aches, nausea, cough, and shortness of breath

The symptoms depend on the transplanted organ or tissue. For example, patients who reject a kidney may make less urine, and patients who reject a heart may have symptoms of heart failure.

Exams and Tests

The health care provider will examine the area over and around the transplanted organ.

Signs that the organ is not working properly include:

  • High blood sugar (pancreas transplant)
  • Less urine released (kidney transplant)
  • Shortness of breath and less ability to exercise (heart transplant or lung transplant)
  • Yellow skin color and easy bleeding (liver transplant)

A biopsy of the transplanted organ can confirm that it is being rejected. A routine biopsy is often performed periodically to detect rejection early, before symptoms develop.

When organ rejection is suspected, one or more of the following tests may be done before the organ biopsy:

  • Abdominal CT scan
  • Chest x-ray
  • Heart echocardiography
  • Kidney arteriography
  • Kidney ultrasound
  • Lab tests of kidney or liver function

Treatment

The goal of treatment is to improve the chances that the transplanted organ or tissue continues to work properly by suppressing your immune system response. Suppressing the immune response may prevent transplant rejection.

Medicines will likely be used to suppress the immune response. Dosage and choice of medicines depends on your condition. The dosage may be very high while the tissue is being rejected. After you no longer have signs of rejection, the dosage will likely be lowered.

Outlook (Prognosis)

Medicines that suppress the immune system may stop the rejection. Most people need to take these medicines for the rest of their life.

Single episodes of acute rejection rarely lead to organ failure.

Chronic rejection is the leading cause of organ transplant failure. The organ slowly loses its function and symptoms start to appear. This type of rejection cannot be effectively treated with medicines. Some people may need another transplant.

Possible Complications

Health problems that may result from transplant or transplant rejection include:

  • Certain cancers (in some people who take strong immune-suppressing medicines for a long time)
  • Infections (because the person's immune system is suppressed by taking immune-suppressing medicines)
  • Loss of function in the transplanted organ/tissue
  • Side effects of medicines, which may be severe

When to Contact a Medical Professional

Contact your provider if the transplanted organ or tissue does not seem to be working properly, or if other symptoms occur. Also, contact your provider if you have side effects from medicines you are taking.

Prevention

ABO blood typing and HLA (tissue antigen) typing before a transplant helps ensure a close match.

You will likely need to take medicine to suppress your immune system for the rest of your life to prevent the tissue from being rejected.

Being careful about taking your post-transplant medicines and being closely watched by your doctor may help prevent rejection.

Alternative Names

Graft rejection; Tissue/organ rejection

Images

  • Transplant rejection: MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia (1)Antibodies

References

Abbas AK, Lichtman AH, Pillai S. Transplantation immunology. In: Abbas AK, Lichtman AH, Pillai S, eds. Cellular and Molecular Immunology. 10th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2022:chap 17.

Badell IR, Adams AB, Larsen CP. Transplantation immunobiology and immunosuppression. In: Townsend CM Jr, Beauchamp RD, Evers BM, Mattox KL, eds. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. 21st ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2022:chap 25.

Tse G, Marson L. Immunology of graft rejection. In: Forsythe JLR, ed. Transplantation: A Companion to Specialist Surgical Practice. 5th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier Saunders; 2014:chap 3.

Review Date 4/18/2023

Updated by: John Roberts, MD, Professor of Internal Medicine (Medical Oncology), Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, CT. He is board certified in Internal Medicine, Medical Oncology, Pediatrics, Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network. Also reviewed by David C. Dugdale, MD, Medical Director, Brenda Conaway, Editorial Director, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team.

Related MedlinePlus Health Topics

  • Organ Transplantation
Transplant rejection: MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia (2024)

FAQs

What is the most rejected organ transplant? ›

Chronic rejection has widely varied effects on different organs. At 5 years post-transplant, 80% of lung transplants, 60% of heart transplants and 50% of kidney transplants are affected, while liver transplants are only affected 10% of the time.

What is the best explanation for the rejection of transplanted organs? ›

Acute rejection happens when your body's immune system treats the new organ like a foreign object and attacks it. We treat this by reducing your immune system's response with medication. Chronic rejection can become a long-term problem.

Which organ has least transplant rejection? ›

Cornea transplants are rarely rejected because the cornea has no blood supply. Also, transplants from one identical twin to another are almost never rejected.

What is the most common cause of graft rejection? ›

Graft rejection is triggered by genetically nonidentical (allogeneic) donor peptides known as histocompatibility antigens, or “alloantigens.” Alloantigens which pose the greatest barrier to graft survival in transplantation en bloc are encoded by the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), also referred to as human ...

What is the hardest organ transplant to get? ›

Lungs are the most difficult organ to transplant because they are highly susceptible to infections in the late stages of the donor's life. They can sustain damage during the process of recovering them from the donor or collapse after surgeons begin to ventilate them after transplant.

What is the hardest transplant to recover from? ›

“A lung transplant is second only to an intestinal transplant for having some of the most complicated outcomes,” says Jason Turowski, MD, Brian's pulmonologist. “We will find a way to solve what many others say is not solvable.”

Can organ rejection be reversed? ›

Most rejection episodes can be reversed if detected and treated early. Treatment for rejection is determined by severity. The treatment may include giving you high doses of intravenous steroids called Solumedrol, changing the dosages of your anti-rejection medications, or adding new medications.

Can transplant rejection be fatal? ›

Acute rejection can be associated with a high incidence of infections and other complications such as the lethal graft-versus-host disease. A single episode of acute rejection is diagnosed and promptly treated, often preventing organ or tissue failure, but the recurrence can lead to chronic rejection.

When does organ rejection most often happen? ›

Most rejections are mild and easily treated by making adjustments to immunosuppression medication dosages. Rejection occurs most often in the first six months after transplant.

Which transplant is never rejected? ›

Cornea is a thin transparent outer layer of the eye that lacks blood vessels but is rich in nerve endings. Hence, cornea transplant in humans is never rejected. Q. Cornea transplant in humans is almost never rejected.

What is the only organ that Cannot be transplanted? ›

“Where extracorporeal machines or transplantation can support or replace the function of organs such as the heart, lung, liver or kidney, the brain is the only organ that cannot be supported or replaced by medical technology.”

Which organ is most in demand for transplant? ›

Kidneys are the organs most frequently needed, followed by livers. Both of these organs can be donated by living donors to save someone's life. 85% of people awaiting a transplant need a kidney.

Which graft is always rejected? ›

Allografts are almost always rejected unless the immune system of the recipient is defective or the donor and recipient are highly inbred and closely related. Grafts between individuals of different species are called xenografts. Xenografts are always rejected unless the recipient of the graft is immuno-incompetent.

What is the survival rate of graft rejection? ›

One recent retrospective study demonstrated a graft survival rate of 94.7% with a graft rejection rate of 1.7%.

What is the trigger for graft rejection? ›

In most cases, adaptive immune responses to the grafted tissues are the major impediment to successful transplantation. Rejection is caused by immune responses to alloantigens on the graft, which are proteins that vary from individual to individual within a species, and are thus perceived as foreign by the recipient.

Which organ can never be transplanted? ›

Organs that have been successfully transplanted include the heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas, intestine, and thymus. Some organs, like the brain, cannot be transplanted. Tissues include bones, tendons (both referred to as musculoskeletal grafts), cornea, skin, heart valves, nerves and veins.

What is the one organ that Cannot be transplanted? ›

“Where extracorporeal machines or transplantation can support or replace the function of organs such as the heart, lung, liver or kidney, the brain is the only organ that cannot be supported or replaced by medical technology.”

What organ transplant has the highest success rate? ›

Adult kidney transplantation is perhaps the greatest success among all the procedures; more than 270,000 initial transplantations have been performed since 1970.

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