13 research outputs found

    Adult Height in Patients with Advanced CKD Requiring Renal Replacement Therapy during Childhood.

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    BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Growth and final height are of major concern in children with ESRD. This study sought to describe the distribution of adult height of patients who started renal replacement therapy (RRT) during childhood and to identify determinants of final height in a large cohort of RRT children. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS: A total of 1612 patients from 20 European countries who started RRT before 19 years of age and reached final height between 1990 and 2011 were included. Linear regression analyses were performed to calculate adjusted mean final height SD score (SDS) and to investigate its potential determinants. RESULTS: The median final height SDS was -1.65 (median of 168 cm in boys and 155 cm in girls). Fifty-five percent of patients attained an adult height within the normal range. Adjusted for age at start of RRT and primary renal diseases, final height increased significantly over time from -2.06 SDS in children who reached adulthood in 1990-1995 to -1.33 SDS among those reaching adulthood in 2006-2011. Older age at start of RRT, more recent period of start of RRT, cumulative percentage time on a functioning graft, and greater height SDS at initiation of RRT were independently associated with a higher final height SDS. Patients with congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract and metabolic disorders had a lower final height than those with other primary renal diseases. CONCLUSIONS: Although final height remains suboptimal in children with ESRD, it has consistently improved over time

    NeuroGuard - Software zur DurchfĂĽhrung von geriatrischen und neurologischen Assessments

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    RANDI2 - Software zur Randomisation klinischer Studien

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    The CERTAIN Registry: A Novel, Web-Based Registry and Research Platform for Pediatric Renal Transplantation in Europe

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    BACKGROUND: The results of pediatric renal transplantation have improved markedly in the last decade. However, a number of relevant clinical problems remain, such as organ damage caused by chronic rejection, long-term toxicity of immunosuppressive therapy, difficulty in developing tolerance-inducing protocols, secondary cardiovascular comorbidity, post-transplantation lymphoproliferative disease, suboptimal longitudinal growth, quality of life, adherence to immunosuppressive medication, and structured transition programs to adult care. These unmet clinical needs require intense collaborative and interdisciplinary clinical research. We recently founded the Cooperative European Paediatric Renal TransplAnt INitiative (CERTAIN; www.certain-registry.eu) as a research network and platform built on a novel, web-based registry. RESULTS: The registry's dataset provides essential information on generic kidney transplantation-related topics and also captures pediatric-specific topics, such as growth, physical and psychosocial development, and adherence. Due to its flexibility the system can be used as follows: (1) as a registry capturing a minimal or an extended dataset; (2) as a center and/or country-specific transplantation database; or (3) as a patient-specific electronic transplantation chart. The data can be exported directly from the CERTAIN web application into statistical software packages for scientific analyses. The rights regarding data ownership, evaluation, and publications are regulated in the registry's rules of procedure. Data quality is ensured by automatic software validation and a manual data review process. To avoid redundant data entry, CERTAIN has established interfaces for data change with Eurotransplant, the Collaborative Transplant Study (CTS), and the registry of the European Society of Pediatric Nephrology (ESPN) and European Renal Association - European Dialysis and Transplant Association (ERA-EDTA) (ESPN/ERA-EDTA registry). CERTAIN fulfils all regulatory and ethical requirements of the European Union and Germany, in particular, regarding patients' data privacy and security. CONCLUSION: Using modern information technology, the recently established multinational CERTAIN Registry fills a gap in Europe for collaborative 5research and quality assurance in the field of pediatric renal transplantation

    Vaccination titres pre- and post-transplant in paediatric renal transplant recipients and the impact of immunosuppressive therapy

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    BACKGROUND: Avoidance of vaccine-preventable infections in paediatric renal allograft recipients is of utmost importance. However, the development and maintenance of protective vaccination titres may be impaired in this patient population owing to their need for immunosuppressive medication.METHODS: In the framework of the Cooperative European Paediatric Renal Transplant Initiative (CERTAIN), we therefore performed a multi-centre, multi-national study and analysed vaccination titres pre- and post-transplant in 155 patients with serial titre measurements in comparison with published data in healthy children.RESULTS: The percentage of patients with positive vaccination titres before renal transplantation (RTx) was low, especially for diphtheria (38.5%, control 75%) and pertussis (21.3%, control 96.3%). As few as 58.1% of patients had a hepatitis B antibody (HBsAb) titre &gt;100 IU/L before RTx. 38.1% of patients showed a vaccination titre loss post-transplant. Patients with an HBsAb titre between 10 and 100 IU/L before RTx experienced a significantly (p &lt; 0.05) more frequent hepatitis B vaccination titre loss post-transplant than patients with an HBsAb titre &gt;100 IU/L. The revaccination rate post-transplant was low and revaccination failed to induce positive titres in a considerable number of patients (27.3 to 83.3%). Treatment with rituximab was associated with a significantly increased risk of a vaccination titre loss post-transplant (odds ratio 4.26, p = 0.033).CONCLUSIONS: These data show a low percentage of patients with positive vaccination titres pre-transplant, a low revaccination rate post-transplant with limited antibody response, and a high rate of vaccination titre losses.</p
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