Scientific article
OA Policy
English

Infectious complications and graft outcome following treatment of acute antibody-mediated rejection after kidney transplantation: A nationwide cohort study

Published inPLOS ONE, vol. 16, no. 4, e0250829
Publication date2021
Abstract

Acute antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) remains a challenge after kidney transplantation (KT). As there is no clear-cut treatment recommendation, accurate information on current therapeutic strategies in real-life practice is needed. KT recipients from the multicenter Swiss Transplant Cohort Study treated for acute AMR during the first post-transplant year were included retrospectively. We aimed at describing the anti-rejection protocols used routinely, as well as patient and graft outcomes, with focus on infectious complications. Overall, 65/1669 (3.9%) KT recipients were treated for 75 episodes of acute AMR. In addition to corticosteroid boluses, most common therapies included plasmapheresis (56.0%), intravenous immunoglobulins (IVIg) (38.7%), rituximab (25.3%), and antithymocyte globulin (22.7%). At least one infectious complication occurred within 6 months from AMR treatment in 63.6% of patients. Plasmapheresis increased the risk of overall (hazard ratio [HR]: 2.89; P-value = 0.002) and opportunistic infection (HR: 5.32; P-value = 0.033). IVIg exerted a protective effect for bacterial infection (HR: 0.29; P-value = 0.053). The recovery of renal function was complete at 3 months after AMR treatment in 67% of episodes. One-year death-censored graft survival was 90.9%. Four patients (6.2%) died during the first year (two due to severe infection). In this nationwide cohort we found significant heterogeneity in therapeutic approaches for acute AMR. Infectious complications were common, particularly among KT recipients receiving plasmapheresis.

Citation (ISO format)
PERROTTET, Nancy et al. Infectious complications and graft outcome following treatment of acute antibody-mediated rejection after kidney transplantation: A nationwide cohort study. In: PLOS ONE, 2021, vol. 16, n° 4, p. e0250829. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0250829
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
Identifiers
Journal ISSN1932-6203
225views
217downloads

Technical informations

Creation16/07/2021 12:14:00
First validation16/07/2021 12:14:00
Update time16/03/2023 01:07:03
Status update16/03/2023 01:07:01
Last indexation19/11/2024 15:04:07
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack