3 research outputs found

    Practice patterns and influence of allograft nephrectomy in pediatric kidney re- transplantation: A pediatric nephrology research consortium study

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    IntroductionThere are no guidelines regarding management of failed pediatric renal transplants.Materials & MethodsWe performed a first of its kind multicenter study assessing prevalence of transplant nephrectomy, patient characteristics, and outcomes in pediatric renal transplant recipients with graft failure from January 1, 2006, to December 31, 2016.ResultsFourteen centers contributed data on 186 pediatric recipients with failed transplants. The 76 recipients that underwent transplant nephrectomy were not significantly different from the 110 without nephrectomy in donor or recipient demographics. Fifty- three percent of graft nephrectomies were within a year of transplant. Graft tenderness prompted transplant nephrectomy in 91% (P < .001). Patients that underwent nephrectomy were more likely to have a prior diagnosis of rejection within 3 months (43% vs 29%; P = .04). Nephrectomy of allografts did not affect time to re- listing, donor source at re- transplant but significantly decreased time to (P = .009) and incidence (P = .0002) of complete cessation of immunosuppression post- graft failure. Following transplant nephrectomy, recipients were significantly more likely to have rejection after re- transplant (18% vs 7%; P = .03) and multiple rejections in first year after re- transplant (7% vs 1%; P = .03).ConclusionsPractices pertaining to failed renal allografts are inconsistent- 40% of failed pediatric renal allografts underwent nephrectomy. Graft tenderness frequently prompted transplant nephrectomy. There is no apparent benefit to graft nephrectomy related to sensitization; but timing / frequency of immunosuppression withdrawal is significantly different with slightly increased risk for rejection following re- transplant.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/169276/1/petr13974.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/169276/2/petr13974_am.pd

    COVID-19 in pediatric kidney transplantation: a follow-up report of the Improving Renal Outcomes Collaborative

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    BackgroundWe report follow-up data from an ongoing prospective cohort study of COVID-19 in pediatric kidney transplantation through the Improving Renal Outcomes Collaborative (IROC).MethodsPatient-level data from the IROC registry were combined with testing, indication, and outcomes data collected to describe the epidemiology of COVID testing, treatment, and clinical outcomes; determine the incidence of a positive COVID-19 test; describe rates of COVID-19 testing; and assess for clinical predictors of a positive COVID-19 test.ResultsFrom September 2020 to February 2021, 21 centers that care for 2690 patients submitted data from 648 COVID-19 tests on 465 patients. Most patients required supportive care only and were treated as outpatients, 16% experienced inpatient care, and 5% experienced intensive care. Allograft complications were rare, with acute kidney injury most common (7%). There was 1 case of respiratory failure and 1 death attributed to COVID-19. Twelve centers that care for 1730 patients submitted complete testing data on 351 patients. The incidence of COVID-19 among patients at these centers was 4%, whereas the incidence among tested patients was 19%. Risk factors to predict a positive COVID-19 test included age &gt; 12&nbsp;years, symptoms consistent with COVID-19, and close contact with a confirmed case of COVID-19.ConclusionsDespite the increase in testing and positive tests over this study period, the incidence of allograft loss or death related to COVID-19 remained extremely low, with allograft loss or death each occurring in &lt; 1% of COVID-19-positive patients and in less than &lt; 0.1% of all transplant patients within the IROC cohort. A higher resolution version of the Graphical abstract is available as Supplementary information
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