Background: A substantial proportion of living kidney donors are women of childbearing age. Some prior studies report a higher risk of gestational hypertension and pre-eclampsia in living kidney donors compared with nondonors. Further research is needed to better quantify the risk of adverse maternal, fetal/infant, and neonatal outcomes attributable to living kidney donation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Preeclampsia increases the risk for future chronic kidney disease (CKD). Among those diagnosed with CKD, it is unclear whether a prior history of preeclampsia, or other complications in pregnancy, negatively impact kidney disease progression. In this longitudinal analysis, we assessed kidney disease progression among women with glomerular disease with and without a history of a complicated pregnancy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin J Am Soc Nephrol
November 2021
Introduction: Pregnancy planning in patients with chronic kidney disease can result in ethical conflicts due to the potential for adverse outcomes. Traditionally, many nephrologists have advised their patients to avoid pregnancy altogether; however, this approach is paternalistic and not patient-centered. An ethical framework could guide joint decision-making between physicians and their patients, but this does not currently exist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRationale: Hemodialysis patients are at significant risk from COVID-19 due to their frequent interaction with the health care system and medical comorbidities. We followed up the trajectory of the first COVID-19-positive maintenance hemodialysis patient at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto. We present the lessons learned and changes in practices that occurred to prevent an outbreak in our center.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrust is a fundamental tenet of the patient-physician relationship and is central to providing person-centered care. Because trust is profoundly relational and social, building trust requires navigation around issues of power, perceptions of competence, and the pervasive influence of unconscious bias-processes that are inherently complex and challenging for learners, even under the best of circumstances. The authors examine several of these challenges related to building trust in the patient-physician relationship.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA range of women's health issues are intimately related to chronic kidney disease, yet nephrologists' confidence in counseling or managing these issues has not been evaluated. The women's health working group of Cure Glomerulonephropathy (CureGN), an international prospective cohort study of glomerular disease, sought to assess adult nephrologists' training in, exposure to, and confidence in managing women's health. A 25-item electronic questionnaire was disseminated in the United States (US) and Canada via CureGN and Canadian Society of Nephrology email networks and the American Society of Nephrology Kidney News.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 49-year-old woman presents with an extensive violaceous rash, rapidly progressive proximal muscle weakness, and dysphagia to solids, consistent with a diagnosis of dermatomyositis. Two weeks later, she palpates a mass in her left breast and is diagnosed with her2-positive metastatic invasive ductal carcinoma of the breast. There is a well-established association between dermatomyositis and malignancy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Participation of compatible living donors and recipients in kidney paired donation (KPD) could double the number of KPD transplants. We determined the willingness of previous directed donors and their recipients to participate in KPD and identified the association of various factors, including financial incentives, with willingness to participate.
Methods: Survey of previous directed living kidney donors and their recipients in a single Canadian center between 2001 and 2009.
Background And Objectives: Obese patients encounter barriers to medical care not encountered by lean patients, and inequities in access to care among obese patients may vary by sex. This study aimed to determine the association of body mass index (BMI) with access to kidney transplantation in men and women.
Design, Setting, Participants, & Measurements: In this retrospective analysis of 702,456 incident ESRD patients aged 18-70 years (captured in the US Renal Data System between 1995 and 2007), multivariate time-to-event analyses were used to determine the association of BMI with likelihood of transplantation from any donor source, transplantation from a living donor, and transplantation from a deceased donor, as well the individual steps in obtaining a deceased donor transplant (activation to the waiting list, and transplantation after wait-listing).
Obese patients have a decreased risk of death on dialysis but an increased risk of death after transplantation, and may derive a lower survival benefit from transplantation. Using data from the United States between 1995 and 2007 and multivariate non-proportional hazards analyses we determined the relative risk of death in transplant recipients grouped by body mass index (BMI) compared to wait-listed candidates with the same BMI (n = 208 498). One year after transplantation the survival benefit of transplantation varied by BMI: Standard criteria donor transplantation was associated with a 48% reduction in the risk of death in patients with BMI ≥ 40 kg/m(2) but a ≥ 66% reduction in patients with BMI < 40 kg/m2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Seasonal and pandemic influenza virus infections in renal transplant patients are associated with poor outcomes. During the pandemic of 2009-2010, the AS03-adjuvanted monovalent H1N1 influenza vaccine was recommended for transplant recipients, although its immunogenicity in this population was unknown. We sought to determine the safety and immunogenicity of an adjuvant-containing vaccine against pandemic influenza A H1N1 2009 (pH1N1) administered to kidney transplant recipients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF