| Literature DB >> 29758123 |
D M Chascsa1,2, O Y Mousa3, S Pungpapong3,4, N Zhang5, A Chervenak2, S Nidamanuri2, E Rodriguez2, D Franco2, K Ryland3, A P Keaveny3,4, J L Huskey1,6, M Smith7, K S Reddy1,8, C B Taner4,9, H E Vargas1,2, B A Aqel1,2.
Abstract
Waitlist time for kidney transplantation is long but may be shortened with the utilization of hepatitis C positive allografts. We retrospectively reviewed the course of 36 hepatitis C positive patients awaiting kidney transplantation at 2 large centers within the same health system, with near-identical care delivery models with the exception of timing of hepatitis C treatment, to determine the impact of timing of hepatitis C treatment on access to transplant, waitlist time, and treatment efficacy and tolerability. The majority of patients had hepatitis C genotype 1a or 1b, and all received direct acting antiviral therapy with 100% treatment response. One patient underwent transplantation in the pretransplant treatment group. The 1-year transplantation rate was 12.5% vs 67.9% (P = .0013) in those treated posttransplantation. The median waitlist time in the posttransplant group was 122 (interquartile range [IQR] 21.5, 531.0) days, which was significantly shorter than the center's regional and national wait time. Pathologic review revealed no difference in allograft quality. Overall treatment related adverse events were not different between the 2 groups. A strategy of posttransplant hepatitis C treatment increased access to transplant and reduced waitlist time. Delaying treatment until after transplant did not appear to adversely affect recipients' kidney allograft or overall survival.Entities:
Keywords: cirrhosis; clinical research/practice; complication; donors and donation; extended criteria; infectious; infectious disease; kidney disease; kidney transplantation/nephrology; liver disease
Year: 2018 PMID: 29758123 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.14931
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086