B.C. organ donor project aims to reduce kidney rejection with better matches
VANCOUVER — Researchers in British Columbia have set their sights on virtually eliminating organ rejection by using advanced genetic testing to better match patients with kidney donors.
Dr. Paul Keown, lead researcher for the pilot project and a University of British Columbia specialist in immunology and transplantation, said the new technology involves genetic sequencing at the molecular level to significantly reduce the risk of a recipient’s immune system rejecting a donor kidney.
“We hope to see rejection almost disappear,” he said of the project, partly funded by Genome British Columbia and Genome Canada through a partnership with Canadian Blood Services.
About half of all transplants fail over time due to rejection, Keown said.