Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2021

MO963GRAFT- AND PATIENT-SURVIVAL AFTER FIRST KIDNEY TRANSPLANT BIOPSY

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


\n \n \n Kidney transplantation is frequently used as a treatment in uremic patients. However, long term function is not easily predicted. The aim of this study was to investigate to what extent histological diagnosis in the first registered transplant kidney biopsy is related to clinical outcome.\n \n \n \n Included were data of 1463 patients (36.6 % women, 63.4 % men) that were merged from a kidney transplantation register and a biopsy register. These patients obtained their first registered transplant biopsy during the period January 1, 2007 until July 30, 2017. Fisher’s exact test and χ-2 analyses were used for cross-tabulation of data. Graft- and patient-survival analysis was performed by Kaplan-Meier analysis with log-rank tests comparing different groups and in next step age and gender adjusted analysis were performed by multivariate Cox-regression-analysis. Data are presented as Hazard Ratio (HR) and 95% Confidence Intervals (CI). A two-sided p-value of <0.05 was considered as statistically significant.\n \n \n \n The graft-survival was shorter for patients with biopsy-proven glomerular diseases (HR 8.1, CI 3.1-20.7) and rejections (HR 4.3, CI 1.7 -10.5) compared to normal biopsy findings. Further, there was a shorter graft-survival for those with chronic damages (HR 3.2, CI 1.3-8.0), acute tubular injuries (HR 3.0, CI 1.2-7.8), and borderline changes (HR 2.9, CI 1.1-7.6). The patient-survival was reduced for patients with biopsy-proven hematological diseases (HR 9.6, CI 2.1-44.0). Sub analysis of all types of rejections showed shorter graft-survival for chronic T-cell-mediated rejection (TCMR) (HR 4.8, CI 2.1-11.7), active antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR) (HR 4.4, CI 2.1-9.3), chronic ABMR (HR 3.8, CI 2.2-6.7), combined chronic ABMR and TCMR (HR 4.0, CI 2.4-6.9) and other rejections (HR 3.3, CI 1.1-9.6) compared to acute TCMR. Patients with TCMR Banff grade II rejection had a better graft-survival (HR 0.35, CI 0.20-0.63) compared to other rejections as well as patients with TCMR Banff grade I (HR 0.52, CI 0.29-0.93). 265 patients had graft-loss and 42 of those patients died afterwards (15.8%). Of the 42 who died after graft-loss 9 patients died within 30 days after transplant failure (21.4%).\n \n \n \n A shorter graft-survival was found in kidneys with glomerular diseases, rejections, acute tubular injuries, borderline changes and chronic damages. A shorter patient-survival was noted for patients with transplant kidney biopsies with hematological diseases. Patients with Banff grade II rejection had a better graft-survival compared to all other diagnosis and other rejections. Further, awareness should be given to patients the first month after graft-loss.\n

Volume 36
Pages None
DOI 10.1093/NDT/GFAB110.0042
Language English
Journal Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation

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