4.6 Article

Non-hepatic Solid Organ Transplant in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: An ECCO CONFER Multicentre Case Series

Journal

JOURNAL OF CROHNS & COLITIS
Volume 17, Issue 7, Pages 1097-1102

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjad030

Keywords

Infections; lymphoma; ulcerative colitis

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This study collected 33 cases of solid organ transplantation in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The results showed that solid organ transplantation does not seem to impact the severity of IBD. However, further investigation is needed to examine the risk of malignancy in transplantation.
Background and Aims Solid organ transplantation, with the exception of liver, has rarely been reported in patients affected by inflammatory bowel diseases [IBD]. Methods This is an ECCO-CONFER project collecting cases of solid organ transplants [with the exclusion of liver] that were performed in IBD patients. We evaluated the change in the IBD therapy, need for bowel resection due to medically refractory IBD, or need for hospitalisation due to IBD relapse ['severe IBD course'] before and after transplantation. Results in total, 34 organ transplantations [28 kidney, five heart, one lung] in 33 IBD patients were collected [67% male, 55% Crohn's disease, mean age 53 +/- 16 years]. The median follow-up was 4.3 years (interquartile range [IQR] 3.2-10.7); 29 patients [87.9%] were treated with tacrolimus, 25 [76%] with systemic steroids, 22 [67%] with mycophenolate mofetil, 11 [33%] with everolimus, six with cyclosporine [18%]. One patient was treated with infliximab, two patients with adalimumab, two patients with vedolizumab, one patient with ustekinumab. Overall, a severe IBD course was observed in three [9.3%] patients before transplantation and in four [11.7%] in the post-transplant setting [p = 0.26]. Three cases of cancer [excluding skin non-melanoma] [9.1%] were recorded in the post-transplantation period versus two in the pre-transplantation period [6.1%, p = 0.04]. Six patients [18.2%] died during the period of observation. No deaths were associated with IBD or complications of the transplant. Conclusions In IBD patients, solid organ transplantation does not seem to impact on the IBD severity. However, the risk of malignancy needs further investigation.

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