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Percutaneous Ultrasound-Guided Kidney Transplant Biopsy Outcomes: From the Nephrologist to the Radiologist Standpoint. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Kidney transplant biopsies are crucial for assessing issues with kidney transplants and are performed under ultrasound guidance by either nephrologists or radiologists.
  • A study analyzing 678 biopsies found similar complication rates between the two specialties, with 8% overall complications and no statistically significant difference in outcomes.
  • Factors like blood pressure control and anticoagulation use significantly affected complications and transfusions, but the specialist performing the biopsy did not impact these rates.

Article Abstract

Background: Kidney transplant biopsies are the gold standard for evaluating allograft dysfunction. These biopsies are performed by nephrologists and radiologists under real-time ultrasound guidance. A few studies have examined the outcomes of ultrasound-guided kidney transplant biopsy in transplant recipients; however, none have compared these outcomes between both specialties.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed a cohort of 678 biopsies performed in a single center during a 44-month study period. Biopsies were stratified into two groups based upon the specialist performing the procedure: interventional radiology (IR; =447) and transplant nephrology (TN; =231).

Results: There were 55 (8%) complications related to biopsies in the entire cohort: 37 (8.2%) in the IR group and 18 (7.7%) in the TN group, without statistical difference between the groups (=0.94). Blood pressure control and prior use of anticoagulation were significant predictors of complicated biopsies (=0.004 and 0.02, respectively). Being a woman and prior use of anticoagulation were significant predictors of transfusion of blood products (=0.01 and 0.01, respectively). Being a woman and blood pressure control were significant predictors of overall perinephric hematoma (=0.01 and 0.01, respectively), and Black race was a significant predictor of perinephric hematoma without worsening of renal function (=0.005). The specialist team performing the procedure was not a statistically significant predictor of biopsy complications, transfusion of blood products, or perinephric hematoma with comparable sample yield.

Conclusions: Percutaneous ultrasound-guided kidney transplant biopsy performed by transplant nephrologists have similar complication rates when compared with interventional radiologists in an academic center.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9717654PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.34067/KID.0000332022DOI Listing

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