| Literature DB >> 28819637 |
Muhammad Abdul Mabood Khalil1, Jackson Tan2, Said Khamis1, Muhammad AshhadUllah Khalil3, Rabeea Azmat4, Arslan Rahat Ullah5.
Abstract
Cigarette smoking affects many organs. It causes vasoconstriction through activation of sympathetic nervous system which leads to elevation of blood pressure and reduction in glomerular filtration rate and filtration pressure. It also causes thickening of renal arterioles. Cigarette smoking increases the risk of microalbuminuria and accelerates progression of microalbuminuria to macroalbuminuria. Furthermore, it causes rapid loss of glomerular filtration rate in chronic kidney disease patients. After kidney donation, these factors may be injurious to the solitary kidney. Kidney donors with history of cigarette smoking are prone to develop perioperative complications, pneumonia, and wound infection. Postkidney transplantation various stressors including warm and cold ischemia time, delayed graft function, and exposure to calcineurin inhibitors may result in poor graft function. Continuation of cigarette smoking in kidney transplant recipients will add further risk. In this review, we will specifically discuss the effects of cigarette smoking on normal kidneys, live kidney donors, and kidney transplant recipients. This will include adverse effects of cigarette smoking on graft and patient survival, cardiovascular events, rejection, infections, and cancers in kidney transplant recipients. Lastly, the impact of kidney transplantation on behavior and smoking cessation will also be discussed.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28819637 PMCID: PMC5551477 DOI: 10.1155/2017/6213814
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Med ISSN: 2314-758X
Figure 1Smoking and its effects in kidney transplantation.
Summary of previous publications on implication of cigarette smoking in kidney donors.
| Number | Author | Journal/year | Conclusion |
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| (1) | Segev et al. [ | JAMA/2010 | Higher death rate in kidney donors with cigarette smoking |
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| (2) | Patel et al. [ | Transplantation/2008 | More perioperative complications |
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| (3) | Mjøen et al. [ | Transplantation/2009 | More postoperative wound infections |
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| (4) | Ommen et al. [ | Am J Transplant/2011 | Less likely to provide follow-up information requested by transplant centers |
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| (5) | Robert et al. [ | J Crit Care/2010 | No impact on delayed graft function |
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| (6) | Heldt et al. [ | AdvUrol/2011 | (1) Active smoker or past history of smoking has high creatinine at end of 1 year as compared to the nonsmoker. |
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| (7) | Underwood et al. [ | Clin Transplant/2014 | (1) No difference in postoperative complications |
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| (8) | Keles et al. [ | Transplant Proc/2015 | Significant drop in cigarette smoking from 47% to 29% after kidney donation |
Summary of previous publications on implication of cigarette smoking on graft survival.
| Number | Author | Journal/year | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| (1) | Kasiske and Klinger [ | J Am SocNephrol/2000 | Smoking more than 25 pack-years at transplantation (compared to smoking less than 25 pack-years or never having smoked) was associated with a 30% higher risk of graft failure (relative risk 1.30; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.04 to 1.63; |
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| (2) | Agarwal et al. [ | Am J Nephrol/2011 | (1) Past history of smoking in recipient did not have any impact on graft survival |
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| (3) | Underwood et al. [ | Clin Transplant./2014 | Recipient smoking reduces graft survival (HR = 1.74, |
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| (4) | Gombos et al. [ | Transplant Proc. 2010 | No difference in creatinine at 3 months, but creatinine at 1 year was significantly higher in smokers |
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| (5) | Sung et al. [ | Transplantation/2001 | Patients who were smokers at the time of pretransplant evaluation had kidney graft survival of 84%, 65%, and 48% at 1, 5, and 10 years, respectively, compared with graft survival in nonsmokers of 88%, 78%, and 62% ( |
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| (6) | Hurst et al. [ | Transplantation/2011 | (1) Compared with never smokers, incident smoking after transplant was associated with increased risk of death-censored allograft loss (adjusted hazard ratio [AHR] 1.46 [95% confidence interval {CI}: 1.19–1.79]; |
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| (7) | Cosio et al. [ | Clin Transplant./1999 | Cox regression analysis showed significantly shorter graft survival in smokers ( |
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| (8) | Matas et al. [ | Ann Surg./2001 | Pretransplant smoking was an important risk factor of a poorer long-term graft survival among recipients with 1-year graft survival (RR, 2.1) |
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| (9) | Woo et al. [ | J Nephrol/2002 | Cox regression analysis showed that cigarette smoking was associated with graft failure having relative risk of 1.81 |
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| (10) | Kheradmand and Shahbazian [ | Urol J/2005 | Pretransplant smoking was significantly associated with reduced overall graft survival ( |
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| (11) | Yavuz et al. [ | Transplant Proc/2004 | No significant relationship between pretransplant smoking and educational status ( |
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| (12) | Mohamed Ali et al. [ | Saudi J Kidney Dis Transpl./2009 | The mean graft survival in patients who were smokers at the time of pretransplant evaluation was 89.3% compared with 92.5% in the nonsmokers ( |
Summary of studies on implications of cigarette smoking on kidney transplant recipient survival.
| Number | Author | Journal/year | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|
| (1) | Kasiske and Klinger [ | J Am SocNephrol/2000 | The increase in graft failure was due to an increase in deaths (adjusted relative risk 1.42; 95% CI, 1.08 to 1.87; |
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| (2) | Agarwal et al. [ | Am J Nephrol/2011 | Current smoking and past smoking in renal transplant recipient resulted in higher risk for death than never smoking (HR = 2.1, 95% CI 1.1–3.8, |
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| (3) | Underwood et al. [ | Clin Transplant./2014 | Both donor and recipient smoking decreased recipient survival (HR = 1.93, |
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| (4) | Duerinckx et al. [ | Transplantation/2016 | Shorter patient survival time (OR 0.59, 95% CI 0.44–0.79) and higher odds of mortality (OR 1.74, 95% CI 1.21–2.48) in solid organ transplantation |
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| (5) | Opelz and Döhler [ | Transplantation/2016 | Compared with patients who had never smoked ( |
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| (6) | Hurst et al. [ | Transplantation/2011 | Compared with never smokers, incident smoking after transplant was associated with increased risk death (AHR [adjusted hazard ratio] 2.32 [95% CI: 1.98–2.72]; |
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| (7) | Arend et al. [ | Nephrol Dial Transplant/1997 | Smoking was associated with increased mortality after >1 year posttransplantation RR (95% CI) 2.2 (1.4–3.7) |
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| (8) | Cosio et al. [ | Clin Transplant./1999 | By Cox regression, patient survival time was significantly shorter in diabetics ( |
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| (9) | Woo et al. [ | Journal of Nephrol/2002 | Smoking was an independent risk factor for patient survival (hazard ratio, 1.81) |
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| (10) | Yavuz et al. [ | Transplant Proc/2004 | No significant relationship between pretransplant smoking and educational status ( |