Quantifying infection risks in incompatible living donor kidney transplant recipients |
| |
Authors: | Robin K. Avery Jennifer D. Motter Kyle R. Jackson Robert A. Montgomery Allan B. Massie Edward S. Kraus Kieren A. Marr Bonnie E. Lonze Nada Alachkar Mary J. Holechek Darin Ostrander Niraj Desai Madeleine M. Waldram Shmuel Shoham Seema Mehta Steinke Aruna Subramanian Janet M. Hiller Julie Langlee Sheila Young Dorry L. Segev Jacqueline M. Garonzik Wang |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Division of Infectious Disease, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland;2. Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland;3. The NYU Transplant Institute, New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, New York;4. Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland;5. Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, California |
| |
Abstract: | Desensitization has enabled incompatible living donor kidney transplantation (ILDKT) across HLA/ABO barriers, but added immunomodulation might put patients at increased risk of infections. We studied 475 recipients from our center from 2010 to 2015, categorized by desensitization intensity: none/compatible (n = 260), low (0-4 plasmaphereses, n = 47), moderate (5-9, n = 74), and high (≥10, n = 94). The 1-year cumulative incidence of infection was 50.1%, 49.8%, 66.0%, and 73.5% for recipients who received none, low, moderate, and high-intensity desensitization (P < .001). The most common infections were UTI (33.5% of ILDKT vs. 21.5% compatible), opportunistic (21.9% vs. 10.8%), and bloodstream (19.1% vs. 5.4%) (P < .001). In weighted models, a trend toward increased risk was seen in low (wIRR = 0.771.402.56,P = .3) and moderately (wIRR = 0.881.352.06,P = .2) desensitized recipients, with a statistically significant 2.22-fold (wIRR = 1.332.223.72,P = .002) increased risk in highly desensitized recipients. Recipients with ≥4 infections were at higher risk of prolonged hospitalization (wIRR = 2.623.574.88, P < .001) and death-censored graft loss (wHR = 1.154.0113.95,P = .03). Post–KT infections are more common in desensitized ILDKT recipients. A subset of highly desensitized patients is at ultra-high risk for infections. Strategies should be designed to protect patients from the morbidity of recurrent infections, and to extend the survival benefit of ILDKT across the spectrum of recipients. |
| |
Keywords: | clinical research / practice infectious disease kidney transplantation / nephrology infection and infectious agents desensitization kidney transplantation: living donor |
|
|