BMJ Open (Nov 2024)

Management of Post-transplant Infections in Collaborating Hospitals (MATCH) Programme: a prospective cohort of all transplant recipients at Copenhagen University Hospital—Rigshospitalet, Denmark

  • Finn Gustafsson,
  • Marie Helleberg,
  • Frederik Viggo Lautrup Esmann,
  • Sadaf Zahid,
  • Kasper Sommerlund Moestrup,
  • Nick Normand,
  • Charlotte Matthews,
  • Henrik Sengeløv,
  • Michael Perch,
  • Nicolai Aagaard Schultz,
  • Søren Schwartz Sørensen,
  • Jesper Melchior Hansen,
  • Vibeke Brix Christensen,
  • Daniel D Murray,
  • J Lundgren,
  • Cornelia Geisler Crone

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-089966
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 11

Abstract

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Purpose The Management of Post-transplant Infections in Collaborating Hospitals (MATCH) programme, initiated in 2011 and still ongoing, was created to 1) optimise the implementation of existing preventive strategies against viral infections in solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients and allogenic haematopoietic stem-cell transplant (HSCT) recipients and 2) advance research in the field of transplantation by collecting data from a multitude of sources.Participants All SOT and HSCT recipients at Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, are followed in MATCH. By February 2021, a total of 1192 HSCT recipients and 2039 SOT recipients have been included. Participants are followed life long. An automated electronic data capture system retrieves prospective data from nationwide registries. Data from the years prior to transplantation are also collected.Findings to date Data entries before and after transplantation include the following: biochemistry: 13 995 222 and 26 127 817; microbiology, cultures: 242 023 and 410 558; other microbiological analyses: 265 007 and 566 402; and pathology: 170 884 and 200 394. There are genomic data on 2431 transplant recipients, whole blood biobank samples from 1003 transplant recipients and faeces biobank samples from 207 HSCT recipients. Clinical data collected in MATCH have contributed to 50 scientific papers published in peer-reviewed journals and have demonstrated success in reducing cytomegalovirus disease in SOT recipients. The programme has established international collaborations with the Swiss Transplant Cohort Study and the lung transplant cohort at Toronto General Hospital.Future plans Enrolment into MATCH is ongoing with no planned end date for enrolment or follow-up. MATCH will continue to provide high-quality data on transplant recipients and expand and strengthen international collaborations.