AI Article Synopsis

  • Hyperglycemia (HG) and prediabetes are often overlooked in children undergoing liver (LT) and renal (RT) transplants, yet they increase the risk for diabetes and heart disease, prompting the DIABGRAFT study to analyze these conditions.
  • The study included a retrospective analysis of 195 LT and 20 RT patients, revealing that 25% of LT and 35% of RT patients experienced transient HG, with 20% of RT patients developing diabetes, often linked to glucocorticoid use and complications like infection.
  • Additionally, while standard blood tests for diabetes markers showed normal results, more sensitive measures indicated insulin resistance and impaired glucose tolerance, highlighting the importance of monitoring glycemic levels immediately after transplant

Article Abstract

Background: Hyperglycemia (HG) and prediabetes are rarely sought in pediatric liver (LT) and renal (RT) transplantation, yet their presence indicates a high risk of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The objectives of our DIABGRAFT study were to retrospectively (rDIABGRAFT) and longitudinally (pDIABGRAFT) characterize HG and (pre)diabetes in a cohort of children with LT or/and RT.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed risk factors of HG from 195 children with LT from 2012 to 2019 and twenty children with RT from 2005 to 2019 at Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc. In addition, we prospectively followed four LT and four RT children to evaluate the evolution of their glucose metabolism.

Results: Our rDIABGRAFT study showed that 25% and 35% of LT and RT children respectively presented transient HG and 20% of RT developed diabetes. The occurrence of HG was associated with the use of glucocorticoids and with acute events as graft rejection and infection. In our pDIABGRAFT cohort, biological markers of diabetes were in the normal range for HbA, fasting glucose and insulin levels. However, oral glucose tolerance test and glucose sensors showed insulin resistance, impaired glucose tolerance and HG in the post-prandial afternoon period.

Conclusion: Our study shows that children with LT and RT were more at risk of developing HG when glucocorticoids were required and that HbA and fasting glucose lack sensitivity for early detection of glucose intolerance. Also, measurement of glycemia immediately after the transplantation and in postprandial period is key to detect dysglycemia since insulin resistance prevailed in our cohort.

Clinicaltrialsgov Id: NCT05464043.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9941739PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2023.1080905DOI Listing

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