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1  rejection from other causes of AKI in renal allograft recipients.
2 =256) from an historical cohort of 22 kidney allograft recipients.
3 titial fibrosis (r<0.45) for size-mismatched allograft recipients.
4 Islet function was compared in autograft and allograft recipients.
5 udies targeting tolerance induction in renal allograft recipients.
6 utcome after diagnosis of cGVHD in pediatric allograft recipients.
7 ing ganciclovir when viraemia is detected in allograft recipients.
8 grafts but not in isografts or MPO-deficient allograft recipients.
9 lidated using an independent cohort of renal allograft recipients.
10 psies, all from simultaneous pancreas-kidney allograft recipients.
11 e with abrogated T cell TGFbeta signaling as allograft recipients.
12 of disease recurrence (both DDD and C3GN) in allograft recipients.
13 orine (CsA) were compared in high-risk renal allograft recipients.
14 d Th1- or Th2-type immune responses of heart allograft recipients.
15 n blockade-resistant rejection in T-bet(-/-) allograft recipients.
16 nction (CLAD), which limits survival in lung allograft recipients.
17 ituation commonly encountered in human renal allograft recipients.
18  successfully in a large percentage of renal allograft recipients.
19  effectors in CD4 knockout (KO) skin/cardiac allograft recipients.
20  role of MIR146A in the risk of AR in kidney allograft recipients.
21 ological responses in nonhuman primate renal allograft recipients.
22 a major impact on graft outcomes in AA renal-allograft recipients.
23  generation of effector T cells in rejecting allograft recipients.
24 (BAL) of five healthy volunteers and 27 lung allograft recipients.
25  T-cell function to study 71 long-term liver allograft recipients.
26 ive rejection occurs in 10 to 20% of cardiac allograft recipients.
27 surrogate for time to graft failure in renal allograft recipients.
28 t and prevention of acute rejection in renal-allograft recipients.
29 We obtained 95 urine specimens from 87 renal allograft recipients.
30 uce tolerance in T cell depleted solid organ allograft recipients.
31 e presence of acute graft rejection in renal allograft recipients.
32 sease (GVD) in nonhuman primate (NHP) aortic allograft recipients.
33 for time to graft failure (TTGF) in 68 renal allograft recipients.
34 id not markedly increase in ICAM-1-deficient allograft recipients.
35 correlate with active CMV infection in liver allograft recipients.
36  hypertension and graft dysfunction in renal allograft recipients.
37 ears to have predictive value also in kidney allograft recipients.
38  immunological responses of heart and kidney allograft recipients.
39 antly better renal function in primary renal allograft recipients.
40 ld be used in a preemptive strategy in liver allograft recipients.
41 characteristics of PTLD in cynomolgus kidney allograft recipients.
42 hable from the Neoral values in stable renal allograft recipients.
43 cidence of acute rejection episodes in renal allograft recipients.
44 sing knockout or monoclonal antibody-treated allograft recipients.
45 sphamide pulse therapy in sensitized cardiac allograft recipients.
46 inical rejection in tacrolimus-treated renal allograft recipients.
47 rapeutic target in the management of cardiac allograft recipients.
48 report extends the study to pediatric kidney allograft recipients.
49 ican-American and non-African-American renal allograft recipients.
50 ologically similar to that observed in human allograft recipients.
51 ogeneic IgG concentrations were augmented in allograft recipients.
52 ediated rejection (ABMR) therapies in kidney allograft recipients.
53 r cause of morbidity and mortality in kidney allograft recipients.
54 r monitoring MFIs of de novo allo-HLA Abs in allograft recipients.
55 tion, some aspects are unique to solid organ allograft recipients.
56 a large cohort (n = 301) of pediatric kidney allograft recipients.
57 tubular atrophy = 59) from 168 unique kidney allograft recipients.
58 o prevent AMR including in sensitized kidney allograft recipients.
59 s of donor-reactive memory Th cells as heart allograft recipients.
60 establish the risk of MN recurrence in renal allograft recipients.
61 ment of CAN in a prospective cohort of renal allograft recipients.
62 uppressive agents during treatment of kidney allograft recipients.
63 e challenges of a growing population of lung allograft recipients.
64 lated during operational tolerance in kidney allograft recipients.
65 hould be clinically explored to prepare lung allograft recipients.
66 ely achieved durable chimerism in mismatched allograft recipients.
67 s a frequent, serious complication in kidney allograft recipients.
68 ostimulates a variety of immune responses in allograft recipients.
69 diseases are a major cause of death in renal allograft recipients.
70 odel indicate that lymphocytes from tolerant allograft recipients 1) proliferate weakly to donor stra
71           In the present study of 18 cardiac allograft recipients, 13 patients had negative and five
72 n allograft survival in CsA-treated LIGHT-/- allograft recipients (30 days) was considerably enhanced
73  obtained 114 urine specimens from 114 renal allograft recipients: 48 from 48 recipients with fibrosi
74 s in a highly sensitized cohort of 244 renal allograft recipients (67 with preformed donor-specific a
75                                        In 18 allograft recipients (72%), reduced-intensity conditioni
76 otide polymorphisms, and 2 cohorts of kidney allograft recipients-a discovery cohort and a confirmati
77 ll diffusion parameters remained constant in allograft recipients after transplantation.
78 multicenter study among 106 pediatric kidney allograft recipients aged 11.4 +/- 5.9 years, we investi
79                      Fifty consecutive renal allograft recipients ages 23-72 yrs who were transplante
80                                     Infected allograft recipients also failed to clear the virus and
81                                              Allograft recipients also produced pure anti-A, or pure
82 tment of hyperacute rejection in a pulmonary allograft recipient and detail the immediate clinical fi
83 is is recommended in anti-HBc-positive liver allograft recipients and anti-HBc alone individuals who
84                They occur in the majority of allograft recipients and are fatal in 17-20%.
85  the prospective database of all adult liver allograft recipients and compared to matched data from m
86 and hypertension have been reported in liver allograft recipients and contribute to an increased risk
87  mass index (BMI) is also observed in kidney allograft recipients and deceased organ donors.
88 en that can cause severe clinical disease in allograft recipients and infants infected in utero Virus
89 rus (HCV) infection is common in solid organ allograft recipients and is a significant cause of morbi
90 1 show enhanced homing to the draining LN of allograft recipients and promote transplant survival.
91  obliterative bronchiolitis among human lung allograft recipients and provides a novel and easily imp
92 e induction of transplant tolerance in organ allograft recipients and the development of assays that
93  to be beneficial for vascularized composite allograft recipients and victims of traumatic major limb
94 p is not limited to the use of mATG in heart allograft recipients, and it is observed in nontransplan
95 and clinical characteristics of AHR in renal allograft recipients, and to further analyze the antibod
96 c Ab were 15- to 25-fold higher in CCR5(-/-) allograft recipients, and transfer of this serum provoke
97 raft recipients prompted study of DSA+ liver allograft recipients as measured by lymphocytotoxic cros
98  complement C5 deficient mice DBA/2 as islet allograft recipients as well as cobra venom factor (CVF)
99  lower in ES allograft recipients than in SS allograft recipients at 2 weeks, and ES allografts showe
100 posttransplant cardiac risk among 1102 renal allograft recipients at a single center in 1991 to 2004.
101 pare samples obtained from acutely rejecting allograft recipients at days 7, 9, and 21, we treated on
102 yte globulin (rATG) is largely used in renal allograft recipients at risk for delayed graft function
103 nt outcomes were compared between 88 cardiac allograft recipients at risk for sensitization and 26 se
104 match-positive sera obtained from 12 cardiac allograft recipients at the time of biopsy-proven reject
105 lt diet, BP increased similarly in ES and SS allograft recipients, becoming significantly higher than
106 901 adult tacrolimus-treated primary hepatic allograft recipients between August 1995 and September 2
107 d survival times of non-human primate kidney allograft recipients both as monotherapy and most effect
108 bute to the vasculopathy observed in cardiac allograft recipients by impairing the endothelial nitric
109          Tolerance was confirmed in all limb-allograft recipients by skin grafting in vivo and by MLR
110                                        Renal allograft recipients can be monitored for polyomavirus-a
111                                        Renal allograft recipients can be successfully converted to CD
112 ineurin inhibitor nephrotoxicity in nonrenal allograft recipients can lead to end-stage renal disease
113  be associated with AR, using a large kidney allograft recipient cohort of 2390 European Americans an
114 cular deaths was 2.56 (95% CI, 1.52-4.05) in allograft recipients compared to an age-matched populati
115 strated that the spleens of WHI-P131-treated allograft recipients contained less than 0.001% BCL-1 ce
116 usly accepted fully MHC-mismatched A/J renal allografts, recipients containing donor-reactive memory
117 of CD69 on peripheral T lymphocytes of renal allograft recipients correlates with the presence of acu
118 rement for regulatory CD4(+) T cells in skin allograft recipients could account for this differential
119                          Using the Wisconsin Allograft Recipient Database, we identified 155 KTRs wit
120 of MHC Class II and I, our protocol analyzed allograft recipients deficient in MHC Class II and b2 mi
121 zed prospective trial in primary adult renal allograft recipients, designed to evaluate calcineurin i
122 e adoptively transferred to subsequent naive allograft recipients despite the undiminished in vitro i
123 ns demonstrated that T-cells from irradiated allograft recipients did not exhibit a secondary alloimm
124          Neutralizing IL-4 in IFN-gamma(-/-) allograft recipients did not induce Th17, suggesting tha
125                    A20 haploinsufficiency in allograft recipients did not influence TA.
126 kidney allograft recipients, long-term heart allograft recipients eventually developed humoral and ce
127 ance immunosuppression, depleted human renal allograft recipients experience rejection characterized
128  present the 23-year-old daughter of a renal allograft recipient exposed to azathioprine 75 mg/day an
129  be able to survive, expand, and suppress in allograft recipients exposed to immunosuppressants, such
130 ohort of living (79) and deceased (67) donor allograft recipients followed up over 5 years.
131            We recommend universal testing of allograft recipients for antibodies since that will help
132 assesses the net state of immune function of allograft recipients for better individualization of the
133 eans of polymerase chain reaction in 93 lung allograft recipients for functional polymorphisms in the
134                        We enrolled 71 kidney allograft recipients for serial fecal specimen collectio
135  performed a cohort study of 645 adult renal allograft recipients from 1985 to 1995 to evaluate the r
136                                        Renal allograft recipients generally need to take several immu
137 leeding, and one of the left lateral segment allograft recipients had a cut-surface bile leak, which
138                         Sixteen of the 17 CB allograft recipients had stable engraftment of donor cel
139 cessful management of an ABO-mismatched lung allograft recipient has not previously been described.
140                                        Liver allograft recipients have a greater risk of cardiovascul
141 ates of wound-healing complications in renal allograft recipients in a prospective, randomized trial
142 at mimics obliterative bronchiolitis of lung allograft recipients in human airways in vivo.
143 g-term graft survival rates were observed in allograft recipients in the 2 youngest age groups with A
144 n in the perioperative period of solid organ allograft recipients in the clinic, and correlations bet
145 d therapy was efficacious in high-risk renal allograft recipients in the first year after transplant,
146 of intragraft fibroblasts are recruited from allograft recipients in this experimental model of chron
147                       We included 1518 renal allograft recipients in this prospective, observational
148                                   Four renal allograft recipients, including two children, with BKVAN
149          Histology in FcgammaRIII-KO cardiac allograft recipients indicated perivascular margination
150 /-)/CCR5(-/-) recipients and from RAG-1(-/-) allograft recipients injected with anti-K(d) antibodies
151                    Eight autograft and eight allograft recipients, insulin independent or requiring m
152 ulin antibody responses were detected in all allograft recipients, irrespective of the treatment regi
153 al-gene expression in tissues from rat heart allograft recipients is highly restricted.
154 onor-specific Ab produced in CCR5(-/-) heart allograft recipients is sufficient to directly mediate g
155           Systemic hypertension affects many allograft recipients, is an important risk factor for ch
156 dence of acute rejection in heart and kidney allograft recipients, its role in lung transplantation r
157                                       In the allograft recipients, light signal from CD5+ passenger l
158               However, in contrast to kidney allograft recipients, long-term heart allograft recipien
159                                 In the heart allograft recipients, lower plasma LDH levels were obser
160 ed in first cadaveric or living donor kidney allograft recipients (n = 144) transplanted at the Unive
161  versus 45% of initially insulin-independent allograft recipients (n=154).
162     In a retrospective cohort study of renal allograft recipients (n=169), increased baseline levels
163  prospectively collected biopsies from renal allograft recipients (n=204) with stable renal function
164                           Single-organ renal allograft recipients (n=2217) who had MMF introduced 6 m
165 ng-term survival (>350 days) was achieved in allograft recipients (n=6) under the 7-day protocol of c
166 sessed in spot urine of 182 outpatient renal allograft recipients on maintenance immunosuppression.
167 dii infection on survival of our 582 cardiac allograft recipients operated upon between June 1984 and
168  of rILT3 for immunosuppressive treatment of allograft recipients or patients with autoimmune disease
169 plants, highly sensitized, etc.), extrarenal allograft recipients, or alternative drug regimens such
170                The absence of CXCL9 in donor allografts, recipients, or both significantly decreased
171 ion and have extended the life expectancy of allograft recipients, posttransplant malignancy has beco
172                                     In renal allograft recipients presenting with graft dysfunction,
173  brief course of cyclosporine A to rat renal allograft recipients promotes progressive accumulation o
174 onor-specific antibody-positive (DSA+) renal allograft recipients prompted study of DSA+ liver allogr
175                                        Renal-allograft recipients received 1.5 mg/day or 3 mg/day of
176 n therapy with BSX versus ATG in 88 AA renal allograft recipients receiving transplants at our center
177 firmed in an independent clinical setting in allograft recipients referred to our hospital with AKI.
178 mechanistic insight into immunoregulation in allograft recipients relative to obesity, an increasingl
179 Antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) in cardiac allograft recipients remains less well-understood than a
180 creatinine, we analyzed 49,666 primary renal allograft recipients reported to the United States Renal
181 ls and 313 +/- 43 cells for CD73(-/-) and WT allograft recipients, respectively; p = 0.013).
182 62 +/- 4% and 47 +/- 5% for CD73(-/-) and WT allograft recipients, respectively; p = 0.046).
183  observed that the absence of HO-1 in aortic allograft recipients resulted in 100% mortality within 4
184 fl) xLysM-Cre myeloid cells into MR1-treated allograft recipients resulted in less accumulation of C5
185 a from a multicenter cohort of adult cardiac allograft recipients (samples: n = 477 no rejection; n =
186 MonoIgG against normal human sera, IVIg, and allograft recipients' sera, it was observed that the num
187 189 consecutively transplanted primary renal allograft recipients, sera were collected sequentially p
188          Overall, pretransplant DSA/DSA-Mpos allograft recipients showed a higher incidence of biopsy
189                                              Allograft recipients showed detectable levels of anti-HL
190  2 years in a prospective cohort of 27 liver allograft recipients showed only two patients to be cons
191        Increasing LG3 serum levels in aortic allograft recipients significantly increased neointima f
192                                           In allograft recipient spleens, CXCL9 and CXCL10 were expre
193                                   Successful allograft recipients suffer significant adverse effects
194  SRL monotherapy prevented GVD in NHP aortic allograft recipients, suggesting the value of SRL for co
195 ombination of OX38 and WT.1 had no effect on allograft recipient survival and antimurine immunoglobul
196                                        Forty allograft recipients T-cell depleted with Campath antibo
197 tration and albuminuria remained lower in ES allograft recipients than in SS allograft recipients at
198                       In HCV-infected kidney allograft recipients, the progression of fibrosis should
199 acrolimus monotherapy has allowed many renal allograft recipients to be maintained on spaced weaning.
200 the medical records of 497 consecutive renal allograft recipients to identify patients who had receiv
201  may be used to reduce the exposure of renal allograft recipients to the nephrotoxic effects of CsA.
202 lls accumulated and divided in the spleen of allografted recipients to a greater extent than in those
203                        We examined 530 renal allograft recipients transplanted at our center and foll
204 etil (MMF), and prednisone with BKN in renal allograft recipients transplanted between 1997 and 2004
205                                 Of 279 renal allograft recipients transplanted between March 2003 and
206                         We studied 354 renal allograft recipients transplanted during 1996 to 2001 wh
207 splant antidonor HLA antibodies in 168 heart allograft recipients transplanted from October 2001 to D
208 d a single-center cohort study in 1000 renal allograft recipients, transplanted between March 2004 an
209            Our objective was to determine if allograft recipients treated with a conventional immunos
210               Eighty cynomolgus monkey renal allograft recipients treated with anti-CD154 mAb were st
211 ablished that T cell recovery in mouse heart allograft recipients treated with anti-thymocyte globuli
212 4 immunoglobulin, both in vitro and in renal allograft recipients treated with CTLA4Ig, with or witho
213    Comparable results were seen in wild-type allograft recipients treated with Sirt1 inhibitors, such
214 nt risk factors for BKV replication in renal allograft recipients treated with tacrolimus and mycophe
215 crochimerism was detected in VCA but not FTS allograft recipients up to >60 days after transplantatio
216 osuppression withdrawal in highly mismatched allograft recipients using a bioengineered stem cell pro
217             A 76-year-old African male renal allograft recipient was admitted for acute visual loss o
218 and the mean blood glucose in the 9 pancreas allograft recipients was 89 mg/dl.
219 HLA-A2-derived peptides by spleen cells from allograft recipients was also higher on days 5 and 10 as
220                  The immunologic function of allograft recipients was evaluated ex vivo by enzyme-lin
221 nchymal tissue perfusion of 32 stable kidney allograft recipients was evaluated with CES before and 2
222 resence of ACAID suppressor cells in corneal allograft recipients was tested using a local adoptive t
223 enter, prospective study involving 321 renal-allograft recipients, we measured the resistive index at
224                                              Allograft recipients were administered with 4SC-101 at d
225  Two hundred forty-six first cadaveric renal allograft recipients were enrolled, and 197 were randomi
226                                        Renal allograft recipients were included if he or she had a bi
227                         Isograft and further allograft recipients were killed, and sectioned corneas
228                                    More LURD allograft recipients were male (71%) compared with LRD r
229                                              Allograft recipients were orally administered FK778 at d
230                      One hundred fifty liver allograft recipients were prospectively monitored for th
231         Nonsensitized (naive) and sensitized allograft recipients were randomized into 4 treatment gr
232                     One hundred twenty renal allograft recipients were studied prospectively at 1, 3,
233 e effects of COX-2 inhibition in this model, allograft recipients were treated orally (PO) with 5 mg/
234                     Forty-four de novo renal allograft recipients were treated with Campath-1H (0.3 m
235        Cynomolgus monkey heterotopic cardiac allograft recipients were treated with either IDEC-131 (
236 o-periphery CCL5 gradient in tolerant kidney allograft recipients, which controls recruitment of Treg
237 of the kidney, causing nephropathy in kidney allograft recipients, while JC virus (JCV) replication o
238 eness may be useful in identifying potential allograft recipients who are at high risk for subsequent
239                           Identifying kidney allograft recipients who are predisposed to acute reject
240 3 might be beneficial in identifying cardiac allograft recipients who are prone to develop CAV.
241                We present cases of two renal allograft recipients who developed Strongyloides hyperin
242 f scarring on sequential biopsies from renal-allograft recipients who experienced CAN.
243                     We identified 351 kidney allograft recipients who had serum levels of 25-hydroxyv
244 ectively analyzed our experience in 18 renal allograft recipients who initiated cinacalcet therapy fr
245 retrospectively PTMI among adult first renal allograft recipients who received a transplant in 1995 t
246 retrospectively reviewed 145 cadaveric renal allograft recipients who received either basiliximab (n=
247       We reviewed the records of 1166 kidney allograft recipients who received their allografts at ou
248 ectional study was performed on 227 visceral allograft recipients who survived beyond the 5-year mile
249                              All 1,197 renal allograft recipients who were transplanted at a single c
250   Prompted by the clinical course of a renal allograft recipient, who lost his graft because of CRS,
251     A high-fiber diet prevented dysbiosis in allograft recipients, who demonstrated prolonged surviva
252  transplantation by comparing outcomes of 39 allograft recipients, who were prescribed statins for hy
253 LA-DSAs) are often absent in serum of kidney allograft recipients whose biopsy specimens demonstrate
254 tinctive property of CD4(+) Treg in tolerant allograft recipients, whose induction and function are i
255 se in DSA production can be induced in renal allograft recipients with 'chronic humoral rejection' by
256                                   Four renal allograft recipients with 'chronic humoral rejection' we
257 rdiovascular events and related mortality in allograft recipients with a matched population.
258                                              Allograft recipients with a resistive index of at least
259 is the first study to show that treatment of allograft recipients with AGI-1096 decreases the inciden
260 ifferential diagnosis and initial therapy in allograft recipients with AKI.
261                                 Treatment of allograft recipients with ASGM1 or with anti-NK1.1 antib
262                      Included were 63 kidney allograft recipients with biopsy proven primary MN follo
263  We obtained 25 urine specimens from 8 renal allograft recipients with biopsy-confirmed BKV nephritis
264 o evidence of rejection on biopsy, and renal allograft recipients with biopsy-proven rejection were a
265 on was approximately 10-fold higher in renal allograft recipients with BKV viruria, but 58 (50.4%) of
266 served in 74 renal biopsy samples from renal allograft recipients with BKV viruria.
267 eresis (ECP) and mortality after ECP in lung allograft recipients with bronchiolitis obliterans.
268 r blocker therapy is well tolerated in renal allograft recipients with chronic allograft nephropathy.
269                  Patients comprised 54 renal allograft recipients with cryptococcosis in a prospectiv
270 d whether cyclosporine A (CsA)-treated renal allograft recipients with deteriorating renal function (
271 ion may provide particular benefit to kidney allograft recipients with DGF.
272 lls isolated from the spleen of unresponsive allograft recipients with donor antigen resulted in dono
273 T lymphocytes from healthy volunteers, renal allograft recipients with elevated creatinine but no evi
274 ) on clinical status and lung function in 20 allograft recipients with established BOS, confirmed by
275 We obtained 21 urine specimens from 21 renal allograft recipients with graft dysfunction and biopsy-c
276                        Treatment of LIGHT+/+ allograft recipients with HVEM-Ig plus CsA also enhanced
277                                       Kidney allograft recipients with hypercalcemia and elevated int
278                       Forty-nine adult renal allograft recipients with increased risk of rejection we
279 orneas can enhance graft survival in corneal allograft recipients with inflamed graft beds.
280 tive human interferon-gamma therapy in renal allograft recipients with invasive fungal diseases.
281  be verified in larger numbers of HIV+ renal allograft recipients with longer follow-up.
282 e outcomes of eight adult HIV+ primary renal allograft recipients with median 15 (range 8-47) months
283 present three pediatric and adolescent renal allograft recipients with multiple, recalcitrant verruca
284 risk for posttransplant malignancy in kidney allograft recipients with negative pretransplant HBc, HC
285 y-secreting cells in the blood of nine renal allograft recipients with normal kidney function before
286 cellular and humoral immunity in human renal allograft recipients with or without deteriorating renal
287            Lastly, we also report that liver allograft recipients with plasma cell hepatitis had sign
288 tinct microbiota structures were observed in allograft recipients with posttransplant diarrhea, AR, a
289 cell-derived HLA antibodies (DSA-M) in renal allograft recipients with pretransplant donor-specific H
290 , open, multicenter study, CsA-treated renal allograft recipients with progressively deteriorating re
291 are effective in a small proportion of liver allograft recipients with recurrent hepatitis C.
292 iated with acute rejection, and treatment of allograft recipients with the angiogenesis inhibitor end
293                                Fifteen renal allograft recipients with therapy-naive HCV genotype (GT
294 y secrete proinflammatory cytokines in renal allograft recipients with transplant glomerulopathy and
295   Granzyme B mRNA levels were lower in renal allograft recipients with UTI compared with those with A
296 zyme B mRNA in 15 urine specimens from renal allograft recipients with UTI, 29 specimens from patient
297     Administration of rabbit KC antiserum to allograft recipients within 30 min of cardiac transplant
298 d reduced acute rejection in untreated renal allograft recipients without displaying adverse effects
299                              Hispanic kidney allograft recipients without evidence of preexisting dia
300 and the commonest infectious agent to affect allograft recipients, yet the virus is acknowledged rare

 
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