Risk factors of long-term graft loss in renal transplant recipients with chronic allograft dysfunction.

HR Khalkhali, A Ghafari, E Hajizadeh… - … : official journal of the …, 2010 - europepmc.org
Experimental and clinical transplantation: official journal of the …, 2010europepmc.org
Objectives Graft loss owing to chronic allograft dysfunction is a major concern in renal
transplant recipients. We assessed the affect of immune and nonimmune risk factors on
death-censored graft loss in renal transplant recipients with chronic allograft dysfunction.
Materials and methods We performed a retrospective, single-center study on 214 renal
transplant recipients with chronic allograft dysfunction among 1534 renal transplant
recipients at the Urmia University Hospital from 1997 to 2005. Data registry includes details …
Objectives
Graft loss owing to chronic allograft dysfunction is a major concern in renal transplant recipients. We assessed the affect of immune and nonimmune risk factors on death-censored graft loss in renal transplant recipients with chronic allograft dysfunction.
Materials and methods
We performed a retrospective, single-center study on 214 renal transplant recipients with chronic allograft dysfunction among 1534 renal transplant recipients at the Urmia University Hospital from 1997 to 2005. Data registry includes details from all renal transplants. The renal transplant recipient information is regularly updated to determine current graft function, graft loss, or renal transplant recipient's death. The selection criteria were a functional renal allograft for at least 1 year and a progressive decline in allograft function.
Results
Increasing donor age (RR= 1.066; P<. 001), recipient age (RR= 1.021, P=. 00), recipient weight (RR= 1.024; P=. 029), and waiting time on dialysis to transplant (RR= 1.047; P=. 006), pretransplant hypertension (RR= 3.126; P<. 001), pretransplant diabetes (RR= 5.787; P<. 001), delayed graft function (RR= 6.087; P<. 001), proteinuria (RR= 2.663; P=. 001), posttransplant diabetes (RR= 2.285; P=. 015), posttransplant hypertension (RR= 2.047; P=. 017), and AR (RR= 3.125; P<. 001). Patients in stage 2 at the beginning of chronic allograft dysfunction relative to stage 1 (RR= 4.823; P<. 001) and patients in stage 3 at the beginning of chronic allograft dysfunction relative to stage 1 (RR= 123.06; P<. 001) were significant risk factors for death-censored graft loss. Using mycophenolate mofetil versus azathioprine reduced death-censored graft loss (RR= 0.499; P=. 001).
Conclusion
We found that age of donor, pretransplant hypertension, pretransplant diabetes, type of immunosuppression (mycophenolate mofetil vs azathioprine), delayed graft function, proteinuria, and stage of allograft dysfunction at the start of chronic allograft dysfunction are the major risk factors for late renal allograft dysfunction.
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