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Why do kidney grafts fail?A long-term single-center experience. | LitMetric

Why do kidney grafts fail?A long-term single-center experience.

Transpl Int

Division of Transplantation Immunology and Nephrology, Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital of Basle, Petersgraben 4, 4031 Basle, Switzerland.

Published: October 2002

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic allograft failure is a major challenge for successful long-term kidney transplants, so this study analyzed factors linked to 10-year outcomes among recipients.
  • It compared two groups: the good-outcome group (145 recipients with functioning grafts for 10+ years) and the poor-outcome group (86 recipients who returned to dialysis after 1-10 years).
  • Key findings revealed that older donor age, acute rejection episodes (especially with vascular involvement), and issues like non-compliance and poor medical treatment are strong indicators of a poor long-term transplant outcome.

Article Abstract

Chronic allograft failure remains the main problem limiting long-term success after kidney transplantation. The aim of this retrospective analysis was to define clinical and histological parameters associated with favorable or poor 10-year outcome. To compare outcome we defined two groups of cadaveric-allograft recipients: a good-outcome group (GOG), composed of 145 cadaveric-kidney recipients who had lived with a functioning graft for at least 10 years and who were either still alive or had died with the functioning graft, and a poor-outcome group (POG) consisting of 86 cadaveric-kidney recipients who had had a functioning graft for at least 1 year and had returned to dialysis between 1 and 10 years after transplantation. The following factors were found to be statistically significant indicators of poor outcome: advanced donor age ( P=0.0001); a first biopsy-proven acute rejection episode within the 1st year ( P<0.0001); more than one acute rejection episode within the 1st year ( P<0.0001); acute vascular rejection, especially if occurring after the 3rd month ( P<0.0001); chronic sclerosing rejection ( P<0.0001); glomerulonephritis in the graft ( P=0.0001); and non-compliance and suboptimal medical treatment (15% of the POG). The mean plasma creatinine and mean urine protein-to-creatinine ratios were significantly lower at 1 month and 1 year in the GOG. In conclusion, advanced donor age, acute rejection episodes with vascular involvement, chronic sclerosing rejection, non-compliance, and suboptimal medical treatment are strong predictors of a poor long-term outcome. The plasma creatinine and protein-to-creatinine ratios at 1 year are the best predictors of good or poor long-term outcome.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-2277.2002.tb00207.xDOI Listing

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