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Determinants of graft survival in pediatric and adolescent live donor kidney transplant recipients: A single center experience
47
Citations
24
References
2005
Year
Family MedicineSolid Organ TransplantationTransplantation MedicineHematologyGraft SurvivalPost-transplant HypertensionTransplantation SurgeryTransplantationKidney TransplantPediatric NephrologyBlood TransplantationTransplant RejectionUrologyKidney TransplantationSingle Center ExperiencePediatricsIndependent DeterminantsAcute RejectionTransplant SurgeryMedicineNephrology
The study aims to identify independent determinants of graft survival in pediatric and adolescent live‑donor kidney transplant recipients. The authors retrospectively analyzed 284 live‑donor kidney transplants in patients 20 years or younger, evaluating numerous clinical and demographic variables through univariate and multivariate analyses to determine their impact on graft survival. Acute rejection and post‑transplant hypertension emerged as the independent predictors of graft survival in this cohort.
To study the independent determinants of graft survival among pediatric and adolescent live donor kidney transplant recipients. Between March 1976 and March 2004, 1600 live donor kidney transplants were carried out in our center. Of them 284 were 20 yr old or younger (mean age 13.1 yr, ranging from 5 to 20 yr). Evaluation of the possible variables that may affect graft survival were carried out using univariate and multivariate analyses. Studied factors included age, gender, relation between donor and recipient, original kidney disease, ABO blood group, pretransplant blood transfusion, human leukocyte antigen (HLA) matching, pretransplant dialysis, height standard deviation score (SDS), pretransplant hypertension, cold ischemia time, number of renal arteries, ureteral anastomosis, time to diuresis, time of transplantation, occurrence of acute tubular necrosis (ATN), primary and secondary immunosuppression, total dose of steroids in the first 3 months, development of acute rejection and post-transplant hypertension. Using univariate analysis, the significant predictors for graft survival were HLA matching, type of primary urinary recontinuity, time to diuresis, ATN, acute rejection and post-transplant hypertension. The multivariate analysis restricted the significance to acute rejection and post-transplant hypertension. The independent determinants of graft survival in live-donor pediatric and adolescent renal transplant recipients are acute rejection and post-transplant hypertension.
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