4.0 Article

Long-Term Outcomes of Patients With Amyloidosis Following Kidney Transplant

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages 324-332

Publisher

BASKENT UNIV

Keywords

Familial Mediterranean fever; Hemodialysis; Renal transplant; Survival

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study compared the graft and patient survival rates and complications following kidney transplant in amyloidosis patients and patients with kidney disease due to other causes. The results showed that amyloidosis patients had lower patient survival rates, but similar graft failure and acute rejection rates compared to patients with other diseases.
Objectives: Reported graft and patient survival rates in amyloidosis after renal transplant differ considerably between studies. Materials and Methods: Group 1 included 24 patients who had end-stage renal disease secondary to amyloidosis. Group 2 (the control group) included 24 consecutive patients who had kidney disease secondary to various causes other than amyloidosis. Comparisons between groups were made for kidney and patient survival rates and other complications following kidney transplant. We also compared survival rates of patients in group 1 versus another control group that included patients with amyloidosis who were treated with hemodialysis (group 3; n = 25). Results: Mean follow-up was 109.5 +/- 79.8 months. Biopsy-proven acute rejection and graft failure rates were not significantly different between groups. In group 1 versus group 2, the cumulative 10-year and 20-year patient survival rates were 68.2% versus 86.1% and 36.9% versus 60.3%, respectively (P = .041). Survival was not significantly different in group 1 compared with group 2 and group 3, although patients in group 3 had significantly shorter duration of time to death after the start of renal replacement therapy. Conclusions: Patient survival may be lower in kidney transplant recipients with amyloidosis compared with patients with end-stage renal disease due to other causes. However, graft failure and acute rejection rates seem to be similar.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.0
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available