4.0 Article

Post-renal transplant erythrocytosis: A case report

Journal

PEDIATRIC TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages E7-E10

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/petr.12406

Keywords

erythrocytosis; kidney transplantation; immunosuppression; enalapril; erythropoietin

Funding

  1. CONACYT grant [205627]

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PTE is defined as hematocrit >51% or hemoglobin >17g/dL after renal transplantation. Risk factors include native kidneys with adequate erythropoiesis pretransplant, smoking, renal artery stenosis, and cyclosporine treatment. We report the case of a 14-yr-old female kidney transplant patient, with triple therapy immunosuppression and stable graft function who developed PTE at 12months post-transplant with hemoglobin 17.3g/dL, hematocrit 54.2%, stable graft function, and normotensive with normal cardiac echocardiogram and erythropoietin levels. The only risk factor found was tobacco use. As she had no spontaneous improvement, enalapril treatment was started at 19months post-transplant with a hemoglobin level of 17.5g/dL and hematocrit 53%; by 23months post-transplant, hemoglobin lowered to 15g/dL and hematocrit to 44.5% and continued to be in normal range thereafter. PTE is a rare condition in childhood and can be successfully treated with enalapril.

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