25 research outputs found
Renal association clinical practice guideline in post-operative care in the kidney transplant recipient
These guidelines cover the care of patients from the period following kidney transplantation until the transplant is no longer working or the patient dies. During the early phase prevention of acute rejection and infection are the priority. After around 3-6 months, the priorities change to preservation of transplant function and avoiding the long-term complications of immunosuppressive medication (the medication used to suppress the immune system to prevent rejection). The topics discussed include organization of outpatient follow up, immunosuppressive medication, treatment of acute and chronic rejection, and prevention of complications. The potential complications discussed include heart disease, infection, cancer, bone disease and blood disorders. There is also a section on contraception and reproductive issues.Immediately after the introduction there is a statement of all the recommendations. These recommendations are written in a language that we think should be understandable by many patients, relatives, carers and other interested people. Consequently we have not reworded or restated them in this lay summary. They are graded 1 or 2 depending on the strength of the recommendation by the authors, and AD depending on the quality of the evidence that the recommendation is based on
Antiviral prophylaxis for the prevention of post-transplantation lymphoproliferative disorder
Incidence of PTLD in Pediatric Renal Transplant Recipients Receiving Basiliximab, Calcineurin Inhibitor, Sirolimus and Steroids
A CASE REPORT OF RHABDOID TUMOR OF THE KIDNEY OCCURRED IN THE OWN KIDNEY AFTER LIVING RELATED KIDNEY TRANSPLANTATION
Cumulative Doses of T-Cell Depleting Antibody and Cancer Risk after Kidney Transplantation
De novo papillary carcinoma in a renal allograft: the pros and cons of immunosuppression
Estimating the long term impact of kidney donation on life expectancy and end stage renal disease
Glomerular filtration rate: new age- and gender- specific reference ranges and thresholds for living kidney donation.
BACKGROUND
There is a need for a large, contemporary, multi-centre series of measured glomerular filtration rates (mGFR) from healthy individuals to determine age- and gender-specific reference ranges for GFR. We aimed to address this and to use the ranges to provide age- and gender-specific advisory GFR thresholds considered acceptable for living kidney donation.
METHODS
Individual-level data including pre-donation mGFR from 2974 prospective living kidney donors from 18 UK renal centres performed between 2003 and 2015 were amalgamated. Age- and gender-specific GFR reference ranges were determined by segmented multiple linear regression and presented as means ± two standard deviations.
RESULTS
Males had a higher GFR than females (92.0 vs 88.1 mL/min/1.73m, P 60 years had a GFR < 60 mL/min/1.73m. The GFR ranges were used along with other published evidence to provide advisory age- and gender-specific GFR thresholds for living kidney donation.
CONCLUSIONS
These data suggest that GFR declines after 35 years of age, and the decline is faster in females. A significant proportion of the healthy population over 60 years of age have a GFR < 60 mL/min/1.73m which may have implications for the definition of chronic kidney disease. Age and gender differences in normal GFR can be used to determine advisory GFR thresholds for living kidney donation
