Kidney allograft failure in the steroid-free immunosuppression era: A matched case-control study.

TitleKidney allograft failure in the steroid-free immunosuppression era: A matched case-control study.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsAlkadi MM, Kim J, Aull MJ, Schwartz JE, Lee JR, Watkins A, Lee JB, Dadhania DM, Seshan SV, Serur D, Kapur S, Suthanthiran M, Hartono C, Muthukumar T
JournalClin Transplant
Volume31
Issue11
Date Published2017 Nov
ISSN1399-0012
KeywordsAdrenal Cortex Hormones, Adult, Case-Control Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Graft Rejection, Graft Survival, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents, Kidney Failure, Chronic, Kidney Function Tests, Kidney Transplantation, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors
Abstract

We studied the causes and predictors of death-censored kidney allograft failure among 1670 kidney recipients transplanted at our center in the corticosteroid-free maintenance immunosuppression era. As of January 1, 2012, we identified 137 recipients with allograft failure; 130 of them (cases) were matched 1-1 for recipient age, calendar year of transplant, and donor type with 130 recipients with functioning grafts (controls). Median time to allograft failure was 29 months (interquartile range: 18-51). Physician-validated and biopsy-confirmed categories of allograft failure were as follows: acute rejection (21%), glomerular disease (19%), transplant glomerulopathy (13%), interstitial fibrosis tubular atrophy (10%), and polyomavirus-associated nephropathy (7%). Graft failures were attributed to medical conditions in 21% and remained unresolved in 9%. Donor race, donor age, human leukocyte antigen mismatches, serum creatinine, urinary protein, acute cellular rejection, acute antibody-mediated rejection, BK viremia, and CMV viremia were associated with allograft failure. Independent predictors of allograft failure were acute cellular rejection (odds ratio: 18.31, 95% confidence interval: 5.28-63.45) and urine protein ≥1 g/d within the first year post-transplantation (5.85, 2.37-14.45). Serum creatinine ≤1.5 mg/dL within the first year post-transplantation reduced the odds (0.29, 0.13-0.64) of allograft failure. Our study has identified modifiable risk factors to reduce the burden of allograft failure.

DOI10.1111/ctr.13117
Alternate JournalClin Transplant
PubMed ID28921709
Related Faculty: 
Surya V. Seshan, M.D.

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