Chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) in early renal protocol biopsies: does treatment of borderline and subclinical acute rejections prevent development and progression of CAN?
نویسندگان
چکیده
Histological markers of chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) in early protocol biopsies may ultimately result in deterioration of graft function. The aim of our study was to evaluate risk factors of early CAN histology and to determine whether treatment of borderline and subclinical acute rejections (BR/SAR) at 1-month posttransplant, prevents development and/or progression of CAN at 6-month biopsy. Thirty-five paired kidney allograft biopsies at 1 and 6 months after transplantation were blindly reviewed using Banff'97 criteria. The mean CAN score (sum of histological markers for chronicity) increased significantly at 6-month biopsy (1.83 +/- 1.46 vs 4.66 +/- 2.35; p < 0.01). No CAN was present in 27/70 biopsies (38.6%), 71.4% showed progression and 28.6% were with stable CAN at 6-month biopsy. When compared according to the progression, mean histological index (HI) score (sum of acute/chronic changes) in progressed CAN group (pCAN) increased significantly at 6-month biopsy (5.0 +/- 3.0 vs 9.5 +/- 2.8; p < 0.001). At 1-month biopsy, BR/SAR were found in 68% and 70%, in the pCAN and stable (sCAN) groups, respectively. The percentage of treated BR/SAR in sCAN group was significantly higher (57.1 vs 23.5%; p < 0.05), and the score of acute histological lesions lower (1.08 +/- 0.95 vs 0.35 +/- 0.66; p < 0.01) at 6-month biopsy. In conclusion, 1-month protocol biopsy may be valuable to uncover BR/SAR and the presence of early CAN in stable renal allografts. Progression of CAN at 6-month biopsy in our study was found to be associated with a greater number of untreated BR/SAR at 1-month biopsy. This observation may have important implications in the design of clinical trials aimed to prevent the progression of CAN.
منابع مشابه
Evaluation of Therapeutic Effects of Autologous Bone Marrow Mesenchymal Stem Cells to Prevent the Progression of Chronic Nephropathy in Renal Transplant
Background Chronic allograft nephropathy(CAN) is one of the most common causes of chronic and end stage renal disease. It is defined with Mainly tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis and no evidence of any other etiology, or functional disorder that caused at least three months after transplantation . Control of risk factors (HTN,DM,HLP, …) and limiting usage of calcineurin inhibitors...
متن کاملThe evolution of untreated borderline and subclinical rejections at first month kidney allograft biopsy in comparison with histological changes at 6 months protocol biopsies.
Our study sought to identify the possible implications of histological findings of borderline and subclinical rejections as well as histological markers of chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) in protocol biopsies at 1 and 6 months after living-related kidney transplantation. Twenty-eight paired allograft biopsies were blindly reviewed using Banff '97 criteria, among which only 10.7% (6/56) show...
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Traditionally, renal allograft biopsies were performed mainly in the setting of acute graft dysfunction. Recently, there has been a change of paradigms. Several reports suggested that acute rejection of the graft and chronic allograft nephropathy are often subclinical without any deterioration in the graft function. This raises the issue of biopsies in functionally stable allografts (e.g. proto...
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BACKGROUND There is evidence that biopsy of stable renal allografts may be of value in predicting chronic allograft nephropathy, the main cause of graft loss. However, the reproducibility of such histological evaluation has not been tested in this setting. We tested the reproducibility of the Banff schema for this purpose. METHODS We rated acute and chronic changes in 184 protocol biopsies. I...
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Protocol renal allograft biopsies allow the early detection of histological damage in the renal allograft even before renal function deterioration or proteinuria appears. Two different lesions have attracted the main interest in protocol biopsy studies: subclinical rejection, namely, the presence of tubulo-interstitial inflammation and chronic allograft nephropathy, nowadays termed interstitial...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Prilozi
دوره 26 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2005