New Test Identifies Heart Transplant Rejection
Monitors gene activity in white blood cells
WEDNESDAY, Aug. 27 (HealthDay News) -- The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved AlloMap, a non-invasive test that helps doctors identify heart transplant recipients who are rejecting the new organ.
The test monitors the genetic activity of a transplant recipient's white blood cells, the immune system's primary defense against viruses, bacteria and other germs, the FDA said in a news release.
Rejection occurs when a transplant recipient's body begins attacking the new organ as a foreign entity. A successful transplant is achieved when the body's immune response is suppressed enough to accept the new organ but is strong enough to continue warding off infection, the agency said.
Half of all rejections occur in the first six weeks after transplant, and about one-quarter of recipients have evidence of rejection within the first year, according to government data cited by the agency.
AlloMap is produced by Brisbane, Calif.-based XDx Inc.
More information
The American Heart Association has more about heart transplants.
More articles on heart transplants:
- Comarow On Quality: Life After a Heart Transplant
I've never thought much about living day to day, month to month, year to year with another person's organ. - Comarow On Quality: Amy Silverstein's Reply
In her book Sick Girl,Silverstein writes about the harsher realities of post-transplant life as someone who has lived with a donor heart for 17 years.
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