| Literature DB >> 27490751 |
Roxana Cleper1,2,3, Irit Krause4,5,6, Nathan Bar Nathan7, Maya Mor7, Amit Dagan4,5, Irith Weissman8,9, Yaakov Frishberg10,11, Ruty Rachamimov5,7, Eitan Mor5,7, Miriam Davidovits4,5.
Abstract
From 1982 to 2011, 53 kidney transplantations (KT) for pediatric focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) were recorded in the National Israeli Kidney Transplant Registry (NIKTR): 22-primary (1◦) FSGS, 25-proved/suspected genetic-secondary (2◦) FSGS, six lost/incomplete files/other. Half (56%) of 23 patients with 2◦ FSGS were Israeli-Arabs vs 29% of 1◦ FSGS KT recipients. 1◦ FSGS recurrence occurred in 64% (14/22) of 22 KT in 17 patients aged (median) 14 years vs 1/25 of 2◦ FSGS (P<.001). Early graft days/nonfunction occurred in 9/14 (64%), 2/8 (25%) and 2/25 (4%) of recurrent 1◦ FSGS (rFSGS), nonr1◦ FSGS and 2◦ FSGS, respectively. Twelve biopsies performed in nine of these grafts at (median) 8 days (range 5-60 days) post-KT showed: ATN-5, suspected rejection-4, rFSGS-2, normal kidney-1; rFSGS was diagnosed eventually in 8/9. Dialysis need during the first month post-KT was significantly associated with FSGS recurrence: 6/14 (43%) for rFSGS vs 2/8 (25%) for non-rFSGS. Plasmapheresis (PP) achieved complete and partial rFSGS remission in 5/9 and 2/9 grafts, respectively. Three grafts were excised during the first 60 days post-KT for: nonfunction (1) and bleeding (2). Remaining grafts' GFR was: 78, 42, and 91 mL/min (median) at 5.3, 4.75, and 8 years follow-up for non-rFSGS, rFSGS, and 2◦ FSGS grafts, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: acute tubular necrosis; focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; graft dysfunction; kidney transplantation; plasmapheresis; posttransplantation recurrence; proteinuria
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27490751 DOI: 10.1111/ctr.12825
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transplant ISSN: 0902-0063 Impact factor: 2.863