Literature DB >> 16202107

Long-term outcome after coronary angioplasty in renal transplant and hemodialysis patients.

Maria Borentain1, Claude Le Feuvre, Gérard Helft, Farzin Beygui, Jean Paul Batisse, Gérard Drobinski, Jean Philippe Metzger.   

Abstract

In order to determine how renal transplantation modifies in hospital and long-term outcome after coronary angioplasty, we compared dialysis and renal transplant patients with control patients without renal failure. Seventy-five consecutive dialysis patients (group D) and 37 renal transplant patients (group T) undergoing coronary angioplasty, were compared with two control groups (groups control D and control T, respectively) matched 1:1 with groups D and T for clinical and angiographic characteristics. The mean follow-up was 50 months. The rate of angiographic success was high and comparable in the four groups (P=0.7). Renal transplant patients were younger than dialysis non-transplant patients (P=0.004). The risk of 4-year cardiac death and nonfatal myocardial infarction was higher in dialysis compared to control dialysis patients (OR 2.6, 95% CI 1.35--5.01, P=0.004), in transplant patients compared to control transplant patients (OR 9.93, 95% CI 1.17--84.04, P=0.03), and there was a trend toward a higher risk in dialysis than in renal transplant patients (OR 1.6, 95% CI 0.8--3.19, P=0.08). The risk of 4-year mortality was higher in dialysis patients than in the other three groups (31% in group D versus 19% in group T, 13% in group control D, and 0% in group control T, P<0.001). After adjusting for age, diabetes, and multivessel disease, long-term mortality risk was similar in dialysis and renal transplant patients. On multivariate analysis, renal function (P=0.002), age (P=0.005), and tobacco consumption (P=0.005) were independently associated with 4-year cardiac death. In patients with end-stage renal disease who undergo coronary angioplasty, renal transplantation was not independently associated with a lower long-term mortality compared to dialysis treatment. Both dialysis and renal transplant patients show lower survival rates compared to matched control patients. (J Interven Cardiol 2005;18:331-337).

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16202107     DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-8183.2005.00068.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Interv Cardiol        ISSN: 0896-4327            Impact factor:   2.279


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Authors:  Julian König; Martin Möckel; Eda Mueller; Wolfgang Bocksch; Seema Baid-Agrawal; Nina Babel; Ralf Schindler; Petra Reinke; Peter Nickel
Journal:  J Transplant       Date:  2014-06-19

3.  Superior outcomes of kidney transplantation compared with dialysis: An optimal matched analysis of a national population-based cohort study between 2005 and 2008 in Korea.

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Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2016-08       Impact factor: 1.889

  3 in total

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