BACKGROUND: It is unclear whether patients with heart failure and renal insufficiency should receive a simultaneous heart and kidney transplant or whether a single heart transplantation is sufficient to restore native renal function. METHODS: We analyzed the renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration of the native and transplant kidneys in eight patients long term after simultaneous heart and kidney transplantation using a dynamic MAG3 radioisotope scan and serum creatinine determinations. All subjects had been hemodialysis dependent before transplantation. Seven patients suffered from an intrinsic renal disease that were diabetic nephropathy in three cases, small fibrotic kidneys of undetermined origin in two cases, one lupus nephritis, and cyclosporine nephrotoxicity in one patient who had a previous heart transplant. In one patient renal insufficiency was considered to be solely due to renal hypoperfusion because no intrinsic renal disease could be detected. RESULTS: All patients were on cyclosporine-based triple immunosuppression, transplanted for 4 to 10 years, exhibited cardiac ejection fractions of more than 50% and had normal serum creatinine values. Radioisotopic scan showed no function of the native kidneys in all seven patients with intrinsic renal disease but exhibited normal function of the native kidneys as well as the renal transplant in the patient without intrinsic kidney disease before transplantation. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that a simultaneous heart and kidney transplantation is necessary in patients with cardiomyopathy and renal insufficiency due to primary kidney disease, but not in those with hemodynamically mediated renal failure, even if an immunosuppressive regimen with calcineurin inhibitors is used.
BACKGROUND: It is unclear whether patients with heart failure and renal insufficiency should receive a simultaneous heart and kidney transplant or whether a single heart transplantation is sufficient to restore native renal function. METHODS: We analyzed the renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration of the native and transplant kidneys in eight patients long term after simultaneous heart and kidney transplantation using a dynamic MAG3 radioisotope scan and serum creatinine determinations. All subjects had been hemodialysis dependent before transplantation. Seven patients suffered from an intrinsic renal disease that were diabetic nephropathy in three cases, small fibrotic kidneys of undetermined origin in two cases, one lupus nephritis, and cyclosporinenephrotoxicity in one patient who had a previous heart transplant. In one patientrenal insufficiency was considered to be solely due to renal hypoperfusion because no intrinsic renal disease could be detected. RESULTS: All patients were on cyclosporine-based triple immunosuppression, transplanted for 4 to 10 years, exhibited cardiac ejection fractions of more than 50% and had normal serum creatinine values. Radioisotopic scan showed no function of the native kidneys in all seven patients with intrinsic renal disease but exhibited normal function of the native kidneys as well as the renal transplant in the patient without intrinsic kidney disease before transplantation. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that a simultaneous heart and kidney transplantation is necessary in patients with cardiomyopathy and renal insufficiency due to primary kidney disease, but not in those with hemodynamically mediated renal failure, even if an immunosuppressive regimen with calcineurin inhibitors is used.
Authors: Krzysztof Kiryluk; Andrew S Bomback; Yim-Ling Cheng; Katherine Xu; Pablo G Camara; Raul Rabadan; Peter A Sims; Jonathan Barasch Journal: Semin Nephrol Date: 2018-01 Impact factor: 5.299
Authors: Katherine Xu; Paul Rosenstiel; Neal Paragas; Christian Hinze; Xiaobo Gao; Tian Huai Shen; Max Werth; Catherine Forster; Rong Deng; Efrat Bruck; Roger W Boles; Alexandra Tornato; Tejashree Gopal; Madison Jones; Justin Konig; Jacob Stauber; Vivette D'Agati; Hediye Erdjument-Bromage; Subodh Saggi; Gebhard Wagener; Kai M Schmidt-Ott; Nicholas Tatonetti; Paul Tempst; Juan A Oliver; Paolo Guarnieri; Jonathan Barasch Journal: J Am Soc Nephrol Date: 2016-12-27 Impact factor: 10.121
Authors: Adetokunbo A Taiwo; Kiran K Khush; Margaret R Stedman; Yuanchao Zheng; Jane C Tan Journal: Clin Transplant Date: 2018-10-25 Impact factor: 2.863
Authors: Tian Huai Shen; Jacob Stauber; Katherine Xu; Alexandra Jacunski; Neal Paragas; Miriam Callahan; Run Banlengchit; Abraham D Levitman; Beatriz Desanti De Oliveira; Andrew Beenken; Madeleine S Grau; Edwin Mathieu; Qingyin Zhang; Yuanji Li; Tejashree Gopal; Nathaniel Askanase; Siddarth Arumugam; Sumit Mohan; Pamela I Good; Jacob S Stevens; Fangming Lin; Samuel K Sia; Chyuan-Sheng Lin; Vivette D'Agati; Krzysztof Kiryluk; Nicholas P Tatonetti; Jonathan Barasch Journal: JCI Insight Date: 2022-03-22