| Literature DB >> 28945291 |
Tomek Kofman1,2,3,4, Franck Pourcine1,2,3,5,6, Florence Canoui-Poitrine7,8, Nassim Kamar9,10,11, Paolo Malvezzi12, Hélène François13, Emmanuelle Boutin7,8, Vincent Audard1,2,3, Philippe Lang1,2,3, Frank Martinez5,6, Christophe Legendre5,6, Marie Matignon1,2,3, Philippe Grimbert1,2,3,14.
Abstract
Solid organ transplantation societies recommend a relative contraindication of transplantation for people with bipolar or psychotic disorders. Very few data are available on the outcome of kidney transplantation and the increased risk of kidney disease in those patients. We conducted a retrospective multicenter cohort study (1979-2014) including kidney allograft recipients with either bipolar (BD) or psychotic disorders prior to transplant. Objectives were kidney allograft and patient outcomes compared to a matched control group without psychiatric disorders and the evolution of psychiatric disorder at 60 months after transplantation. Forty-seven patients including 25 women were identified, 34 with BD and 13 with psychotic disorder. Patients' overall cumulative death rates at 60 months were not significantly different in both groups [12.2%; 95% confidence interval: (4.5-24.1) in the group with psychiatric disorder versus 5.2%; (1.7-11.7) in control group P = 0.11] as for cumulative allograft loss rates [11.7% (3.5-25.2) vs. 9.4% (4.4-16.8) in control group (P = 0.91)]. Twenty-three patients (16 with BD and seven with psychotic disorder) experienced at least one psychiatric relapse [incidence rate: 1.8/100 persons- months; 95% CI; (1.2-2.7)] totaling 13 hospitalizations within 60 months of follow-up. Four patients stopped immunosuppressive therapy leading to allograft loss in three. Our study suggests that patients with BD or psychotic disorders have to be considered for renal transplantation with close psychiatric follow-up after transplant.Entities:
Keywords: bipolar disorder; kidney transplantation; psychiatric outcome; psychosis; transplant outcome
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28945291 DOI: 10.1111/tri.13078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transpl Int ISSN: 0934-0874 Impact factor: 3.782