| Literature DB >> 35022021 |
Anke Schwarz1, Roland Schmitt2, Gunilla Einecke2, Frieder Keller3, Ulrike Bode4, Hermann Haller2, Hans Heinrich Guenter5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: After kidney transplantation, pregnancy and graft function may have a reciprocal interaction. We evaluated the influence of graft function on the course of pregnancy and vice versa.Entities:
Keywords: Graft function; Graft survival; Kidney transplantation; Preeclampsia; Pregnancy
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35022021 PMCID: PMC8753888 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-022-02665-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Demographic data of 67 mothers, 92 pregnancies and 95 offsprings
| Duration of dialysis (yrs) | 2.85 ± 2.37 (0–9) |
| Preemptive transplantation (%) | |
| Living-transplant (%) | |
| Transplantation before the age of 18 years (%) | |
| Age of the mothers at transplantation (yrs) | 23.72 ± 7.18 (6.5–35) |
| Post-transplant hypertension pre-pregnancy (%) | |
| Age of the mothers at conception (yrs) | 29.6 ± 4.7 (15–39) |
| Time from transplantation to conception (yrs) | 6.51 ± 5.33 (0.5–24.75) |
| Transplant age at conception including donor age (yrs) | 39.75 ± 14.6 (9.5–67.2) |
| Pregnancy with the 1st transplant (%) | |
| Pregnancy with the 2nd transplant (%) | |
| re-Tx once after that with pregnancy (%) | |
| re-Tx twice after that with pregnancy (%) | |
| Combined pancreas-kidney-transplantation | |
| Liver before kidney transplantation | |
| Pregnancy in yr 1–5 after transplantation (%) | |
| Pregnancy in yr 6–10 after transplantation (%) | |
| Pregnancy in yr 11–20 after transplantation (%) | |
| Pregnancy beyond yr 20 after transplantation (%) | |
| 1 Pregnancy (%) | |
| 2 Pregnancies (%) | |
| 3 Pregnancies (%) | |
| 4 Pregnancies (%) | |
| Azathioprin, prednisolone (%) | |
| Cyclosporine, prednisolone (%) | |
| Cyclosporine, azathioprine, prednisolone (%) | |
| Tacrolimus, prednisolone (%) | |
| Tacrolimus, azathioprine, prednisolone (%) | |
| All pregnancies | 59.39 ± 17.62 mL/min ( |
| Pre-pregnancy eGFR ≥ 60 mL/min/1.73m2 | 73.91 ± 10.33 ( |
| Pre-pregnancy eGFR ≥ 50-60 mL/min/1.73m2 | 54.16 ± 3.95 ( |
| Pre-pregnancy eGFR ≥ 40-50 mL/min/1.73m2 | 45.79 ± 3.36 ( |
| Pre-pregnancy eGFR < 40 mL/min/1.73m2 | 33.33 ± 4.29 ( |
| gestational age at birth (weeks) | 34.44 ± 5.02 weeks ( |
| live-birthrate | |
| < 37 SSW | |
| < 34 SSW | |
| < 28 SSW | |
| Cesarian section (%) | |
| Mean birth weight | 2146.75 ± 926.14 ( |
| Mean birth weight (only live birth) | 2322.26 ± 781.98 ( |
| ≤ 2500 | |
| ≤ 1500 | |
| ≤ 1000 | |
aone pancreas failed before pregnancy
yrs years, fct function
Complications of pregnancy; graft loss during and up to 1 year after pregnancy 4 (4.4%); fetal death during and up to 1 month after delivery 9 (9.5%)
| Pre-eclampsia-related problems | acute graft loss 1 fetal death 3 (3/22 with vs 6/73 without preeclampsia |
| placenta previa | fetal death 1 |
| hemolytic-uremic syndrome of the mother | acute graft loss 2 (1 irreversible, 1 partially reversible after 7 mos of dialysis) fetal death 1 |
| spontaneous maternal retroperitoneal bleeding during pregnancy | fetal death 1 |
| spontaneous maternal intraperitoneal bleeding during pregnancy | |
| transplant bleeding during cesarean section | |
| Not clarified intrauterine fetal death | |
| urinary obturation | |
| intrahepatic cholestasis | |
| rejections up to 1 year after pregnancy | acute irreversible graft loss 1 (non-adherence of immunosuppression) |
| Terminating of pregnancy after 14 weeks because of maternal medical reasonsd | fetal death 2 (twins) |
| mean pre-pregnancy eGFR: | loss of eGFR by pregnancy: |
| 59.39 ± 17.62 mL/min/1.73 (all | 13.89 ± 20.41% of pre-pregnancy eGFR |
| > 60 mL/min/1.73m2 ( | 11.63 ± 21.17% |
| ≥ 50-60 mL/min/1.73m2 ( | 11.12 ± 12.29% |
| ≥ 40-50 mL/min/1.73m2 ( | 16.41 ± 21.06% |
| < 40 mL/min/1.73m2 ( | 22.76 ± 22.76% |
aanticoagulation because of nephrotic-range proteinuria
bunknown reason; marked pre-existing abdominal scarred adhesions
c3 borderline rejections, 1 mild humoral rejection, 1 severe combined antibody-T-cell mediated rejection with graft loss by incompliance
dunintended pregnancy of twins noticed 3 months after transplantation, therefore no change of medication before pregnancy; additionally, suspected renal cell carcinoma of one native kidney
Mos months, HELLP hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets
Fig. 1Estimated GFR before pregnancy was correlated with the number of gestation weeks at delivery (p = 0.01)
Fig. 2Estimated GFR (eGFR) before pregnancy was correlated with the percent loss of eGFR measured 3–4 months after pregnancy (p = 0.04)
Fig. 3Comparison of graft survival curves of women with pre-pregnancy estimated GFR of ≥ 50 ml/min/1.73 m2 to those with estimated GFR of < 50 ml/min/1.73m2, Kaplan–Meier curves, Log-rank (Mantel-Cox) test; Chi square 4.475, df 1, p = 0.0344
Age and cause of death of 11 women during observation after pregnancy as well as number and age of children left behind at their mother’s death
| 58 | Heart failure by hypertension | 24 |
| 51 | Car accident | 16 |
| 43 | Intraabdominal bleeding of enteric fistula | 10, 11 |
| 31 | Pneumococcal septicemia | 5, 8 |
| 48 | Infected knee prosthesis | 12 |
| 33 | Lymphoma | 3, 6 |
| 37 | Heart failure by hypertension | 10 |
| 49 | Bacterial endocarditis | 14 |
| 41 | Coronary heart disease | 12, 13 |
| 37 | Post-ERCP pancreatitis | 1 |
| 39 | Sarcoma | 11, 13, 13 |
ERCP endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreaticography; patient after liver and kidney transplantation, yrs years