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Pediatric renal transplant practices in India
Authors:Sidharth Kumar Sethi  Rajiv Sinha  Smriti Rohatgi  Vijay Kher  Arpana Iyengar  Arvind Bagga
Affiliation:1. Kidney and Renal Transplant Institute, Medanta, The Medicity Hospital, Gurgaon, Haryana, India;2. Division of Paediatric Nephrology, Institute of Child Health, Kolkata, West Bengal, India;3. Fortis Hospital, Kolkata, West Bengal, India;4. Kidney Institute, Fortis Escorts Hospital, New Delhi, India;5. Department of Pediatric Nephrology, St John's Medical College Hospital, Bangalore, Karnataka, India;6. Division of Pediatric Nephrology, Department of Pediatrics, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India
Abstract:Limited access to tertiary‐level health care, limited trained pediatric nephrologists and transplant physicians, lack of facilities for dialysis, lack of an effective deceased donor program, non‐affordability, and non‐adherence to immunosuppressant drugs poses a major challenge to universal availability of pediatric transplantation in developing countries. We present the results of a survey which, to the best of our knowledge, is the first such published attempt at understanding the current state of pediatric renal transplantation in India. A designed questionnaire formulated by a group of pediatric nephrologists with the aim of understanding the current practice of pediatric renal transplantation was circulated to all adult and pediatric nephrologists of the country. Of 26 adult nephrologists who responded, 16 (61.5%) were involved in pediatric transplantation, and 10 of 15 (66.6%) pediatric nephrologists were involved in pediatric transplantation. Most of the centers doing transplants were private/trust institution with only three government institutions undertaking it. Induction therapy was varied among pediatric and adult nephrologists. There were only a few centers (n=5) in the country routinely doing >5 transplants per year. Preemptive transplants and protocol biopsies were a rarity. The results demonstrate lower incidence of undertaking pediatric transplants in children below 6 years, paucity of active cadaveric programs and lack of availability of trained pediatric nephrologists and staff. In contrast to these dissimilarities, the immunosuppressant use seems to be quite similar to Western registry data with majority favoring induction agent and triple immunosuppressant (steroid, mycophenolate mofetil and tacrolimus) for maintenance. The survey also identifies major concerns in availability of this service to all regions of India as well as to all economic segments.
Keywords:challenges  children  developing  pediatric  renal  transplant
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