AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies suggest that using kidneys from HCV positive donors can lead to acceptable results for HCV negative recipients, although acceptance of these donors hasn't widely increased in clinical practice.
  • This study examined kidney transplants from 44 non-viremic and 25 viremic HCV positive donors from 2013 to 2021, finding no significant differences in transplant outcomes between the two groups.
  • While recipients from viremic donors had a higher rate of HCV seroconversion, peri-transplant treatment with direct antiviral agents (DAA) appeared to mitigate risks associated with viremia, demonstrating overall similar outcomes to those from non-viremic donors.

Article Abstract

Historically, donor infection with hepatitis-C virus (HCV) has been a barrier to kidney transplantation. However, in recent years, it has been reported that HCV positive kidney donors transplanted into HCV negative recipients offer acceptable mid-term results. However, acceptance of HCV donors, especially viremic, has not broadened in the clinical practice. This is an observational, multicenter, retrospective study including kidney transplants from HCV positive donors into negative recipients reported to the Spanish group from 2013 to 2021. Recipients from viremic donors received peri-transplant treatment with direct antiviral agents (DAA) for 8-12 weeks. We included 75 recipients from 44 HCV non-viremic donors and 41 from 25 HCV viremic donors. Primary non function, delayed graft function, acute rejection rate, renal function at the end of follow up, and patient and graft survival were not different between groups. Viral replication was not detected in recipients from non-viremic donors. Recipient treatment with DAA started pre-transplant avoids ( = 21) or attenuates ( = 5) viral replication but leads to non-different outcomes to post-transplant treatment with DAA ( = 15). HCV seroconversion was more frequent in recipients from viremic donors (73% vs. 16%, < 0.001). One recipient of a viremic donor died due to hepatocellular carcinoma at 38 months. Donor HCV viremia seems not to be a risk factor for kidney transplant recipients receiving peri-transplant DAA, but continuous surveillance should be advised.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10002558PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm12051773DOI Listing

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