186 results on '"Kute VB"'
Search Results
2. 20 The outcome of deceased donor renal transplant in diabetic nephropathy: A single center experience
- Author
-
Jain, SH, Kute, VB, Engineer, DP, Shah, PR, Patel, HV, Gumber, MR, Modi, PR, and Trivedi, HL
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Systemic Factors Contributing to Gender Differences in Living Kidney Donation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Synthesis Using the Social-Ecological Model Lens.
- Author
-
Loban K, Wong-Mersereau C, Cates Ferrer J, Hales L, Przybylak-Brouillard A, Cantarovich M, Kute VB, Bhalla AK, Morgan R, and Sandal S
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Sex Factors, Motivation, Decision Making, Living Donors psychology, Living Donors statistics & numerical data, Kidney Transplantation psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: The field of living kidney donation is profoundly gendered contributing to a predominance of women, mothers, and wives as living kidney donors (LKDs). Individual factors have traditionally been emphasized, and there is a limited appreciation of relational, community, and sociocultural influences in decision-making. We aimed to comprehensively capture existing evidence to examine the relative importance of these factors., Methods: This was a systematic review of existing literature that has explored the motivation of different genders to become LKDs. Of the 3,188 records screened, 16 studies from 13 counties were included. Data were synthesized thematically using the Social-Ecological Model lens., Results: At the individual level, themes related to intrinsic motivation; thoughtful deliberation; and attitudes, fears, and beliefs; however, evidence demonstrating differences between men and women was minimal. Greater variation between genders emerged along the relational (coercion from family/network, relationship with the intended recipient, self-sacrifice within the family unit, and stability/acceptance within family); community (economic value and geographic proximity to recipient); and sociocultural (gendered societal roles, social norms and beliefs, social privilege, and legislation and policy) dimensions. The relative importance of each factor varied by context; cultural components were inferred in each study, and economic considerations seemed to transcend the gender divide., Conclusions: A complex interplay of factors at relational, community, and sociocultural levels influences gender roles, relations, and norms and manifests as gender disparities in living kidney donation. Our findings suggest that to address gender disparities in living donation, dismantling of deep-rooted systemic contributors to gender inequities is needed., (© 2024 The Author(s). Published by S. Karger AG, Basel.)
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Impact of single centre kidney-exchange transplantation to increase living donor pool in India: A cohort study involving non-anonymous allocation.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Patel HV, Banerjee S, Engineer DP, Dave RB, Shah N, Chauhan S, Meshram H, Tambi P, Shah A, Saxena K, Balwani M, Parmar V, Shah S, Prakash V, Patel S, Patel D, Desai S, Rizvi J, Patel H, Parikh B, Kanodia K, Gandhi S, Rees MA, Roth AE, and Modi P
- Subjects
- Humans, India, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Time Factors, Histocompatibility, Donor Selection, ABO Blood-Group System immunology, Risk Factors, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Graft Rejection, Blood Group Incompatibility immunology, Histocompatibility Testing, Program Evaluation, HLA Antigens immunology, Living Donors statistics & numerical data, Kidney Transplantation statistics & numerical data, Graft Survival
- Abstract
Aim: In India, 85% of organ donations are from living donors and 15% are from deceased donors. One-third of living donors were rejected because of ABO or HLA incompatibility. Kidney exchange transplantation (KET) is a cost-effective and legal strategy to increase living donor kidney transplantation (LDKT) by 25%-35%., Methods: We report our experience with 539 KET cases and the evolution of a single-centre program to increase the use of LDKT., Results: Between January 2000 and 13 March, 2024, 1382 deceased donor kidney transplantations and 5346 LDKT were performed at our centre, including 10% (n = 539) from KET. Of the 539 KET, 80.9% (n = 436) were ABO incompatible pairs, 11.1% (n = 60) were compatible pairs, and 8% (n = 43) were sensitized pairs. There were 75% 2-way (n = 2 × 202 = 404), 16.2% 3-way (n = 3 × 29 = 87), 3% 4-way (n = 4 × 4 = 16), 1.8% 5-way (n = 5 × 2 = 10), 2.2% 6-way (n = 6 × 2 = 12), and 1.8% 10-way KET (n = 10 × 1 = 10). Of the recipients 81.2% (n = 438) were male and 18.8% (n = 101) were female, while of the donors, 78.5% (n = 423) were female and 21.5% (n = 116) were male. All donors were near relatives; wives (54%, n = 291) and mothers (20%, n = 108) were the most common donors. At a median follow-up of 8.2 years, patient survival, death censored graft survival, acute rejection, and median serum creatinine levels of functioning grafts were 81.63% (n = 440), 91% (n = 494), 9.8% (n = 53) and 1.3 mg/dL respectively. We credited the success to maintaining a registry of incompatible pairs, high-volume LDKT programs, non-anonymous allocation and teamwork., Conclusion: This is the largest single-centre KET program in Asia. We report the challenges and solutions to replicate our success in other KET programs., (© 2024 Asian Pacific Society of Nephrology.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Long-term Kidney Transplant Survival Across the Globe.
- Author
-
Hariharan S, Rogers N, Naesens M, Pestana JM, Ferreira GF, Requião-Moura LR, Foresto RD, Kim SJ, Sullivan K, Helanterä I, Goutaudier V, Loupy A, Kute VB, Cardillo M, Tanabe K, Åsberg A, Jensen T, Mahillo B, Jeong JC, Anantharaman V, Callaghan C, Ravanan R, Manas D, Israni AK, and Mehta RB
- Subjects
- Humans, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Waiting Lists mortality, Living Donors, Risk Factors, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Global Health, Tissue Donors supply & distribution, Tissue Donors statistics & numerical data, Kidney Transplantation mortality, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Kidney Transplantation statistics & numerical data, Graft Survival
- Abstract
Background: The outcomes after kidney transplantation (KT), including access, wait time, and other issues around the globe, have been studied. However, issues do vary from one country to another., Methods: We obtained data from several countries from North America, South America, Europe, Asia, and Australia, including the number of patients awaiting KT from 2015, transplant rate per million population (pmp), proportion of living donor and deceased donor (LD/DD) KT, and posttransplant survival. We also sought opinions on key difficulties faced by each of these countries with respect to KT and long-term survival., Results: Variation in access to KT across the globe was noted. Countries with the highest rates of KT pmp included the United States (79%) and Spain (71%). A higher proportion of LD transplants was noted in Japan (93%), India (85%), Singapore (63%), and South Korea (63%). A higher proportion of DD KTs was noted in Spain (90%), Brazil (90%), France (85%), Italy (85%), Finland (85%), Australia-New Zealand (80%), and the United States (77%). The 5-y graft survival for LD was highest in South Korea (95%), Singapore (94%), Italy (93%), Finland (93%), and Japan (93%), whereas for DD, it was South Korea (93%), Italy (88%), Japan (86%), and Singapore (86%). The common issues surrounding KTs are access and a limited number of LDs and DDs. Key issues identified for long-term survival were increasing age of donors and recipients, higher recipient comorbidity, and posttransplant events, such as alloimmune injury to the kidney, infection, cancer, and suboptimal adherence to therapy., Conclusions: A unified approach is necessary to improve issues surrounding KT as the demand continues to increase., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A Multicenter Retrospective Cohort Study on Management Protocols and Clinical Outcomes After ABO-incompatible Kidney Transplantation in India.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Pathak V, Ray DS, Bhalla AK, Godara SM, Narayanan S, Hegde U, Das P, Jha PK, Kher V, Dalal S, Bahadur MM, Gang S, Sinha VK, Patel HV, Deshpande R, Mali M, Sharma A, Das SS, Thukral S, Shingare A, Bt AK, Hafeeq B, Aziz F, Aboobacker IN, Gopinathan JC, Dave RM, Bansal D, Anandh U, Singh S, Kriplani J, Bavikar S, Siddini V, Balan S, Singla M, Chauhan M, Tripathi V, Patwari D, Abraham AM, Chauhan S, and Meshram HS
- Subjects
- Humans, Rituximab therapeutic use, Immunosuppressive Agents therapeutic use, Retrospective Studies, Immunoglobulins, Intravenous therapeutic use, Blood Group Incompatibility, ABO Blood-Group System, Graft Rejection epidemiology, Graft Rejection prevention & control, Graft Survival, Living Donors, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Kidney Transplantation methods
- Abstract
Background: There is no robust evidence-based data for ABO-incompatible kidney transplantation (ABOiKT) from emerging countries., Methods: Data from 1759 living donor ABOiKT and 33 157 ABO-compatible kidney transplantations (ABOcKT) performed in India between March 5, 2011, and July 2, 2022, were included in this retrospective, multicenter (n = 25) study. The primary outcomes included management protocols, mortality, graft loss, and biopsy-proven acute rejection (BPAR)., Results: Protocol included rituximab 100 (232 [13.18%]), 200 (877 [49.85%]), and 500 mg (569 [32.34%]); immunoadsorption (IA) (145 [8.24%]), IVIG (663 [37.69%]), and no induction 200 (11.37%). Mortality, graft loss, and BPAR were reported in 167 (9.49%), 136 (7.73%), and 228 (12.96%) patients, respectively, over a median follow-up of 36.3 mo. In cox proportional hazard model, mortality was higher with IA (hazard ratio [HR]: 2.53 [1.62-3.97]; P < 0.001), BPAR (HR: 1.83 [1.25-2.69]; P = 0.0020), and graft loss (HR: 1.66 [1.05-2.64]; P = 0.0310); improved graft survival was associated with IVIG (HR: 0.44 [0.26-0.72]; P = 0.0010); higher BPAR was reported with conventional tube method (HR: 3.22 [1.9-5.46]; P < 0.0001) and IA use (HR: 2 [1.37-2.92]; P < 0.0001), whereas lower BPAR was reported in the prepandemic era (HR: 0.61 [0.43-0.88]; P = 0.008). Primary outcomes were not associated with rituximab dosing or high preconditioning/presurgery anti-A/anti-B titers. Incidence of overall infection 306 (17.39%), cytomegalovirus 66 (3.75%), and BK virus polyoma virus 20 (1.13%) was low. In unmatched univariate analysis, the outcomes between ABOiKT and ABOcKT were comparable., Conclusions: Our largest multicenter study on ABOiKT provides insights into various protocols and management strategies with results comparable to those of ABOcKT., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Kidney paired donation in developing countries: A global perspective.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Fleetwood VA, Chauhan S, Meshram HS, Caliskan Y, Varma C, Yazıcı H, Oto ÖA, and Lentine KL
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: We review the key principles of kidney paired donation (KPD) and discuss the status and unique considerations for KPD in developing countries., Recent Findings: Despite the advantages of KPD programs, they remain rare among developing nations, and the programs that exist have many differences with those of in developed countries. There is a paucity of literature and lack of published data on KPD from most of the developing nations. Expanding KPD programs may require the adoption of features and innovations of successful KPD programs. Cooperation with national and international societies should be encouraged to ensure endorsement and sharing of best practices., Summary: KPD is in the initial stages or has not yet started in the majority of the emerging nations. But the logistics and strategies required to implement KPD in developing nations differ from other parts of the world. By learning from the KPD experience in developing countries and adapting to their unique needs, it should be possible to expand access to KPD to allow more transplants to happen for patients in need world-wide., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest: None
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Is it safe to undergo living donor kidney transplant within 2 weeks following COVID-19?
- Author
-
Kute VB, Chauhan S, Ray DS, Hegde U, Sinha VK, Das SS, Godara S, Anandh U, Gulati S, Goswami J, Dalal S, Babu K, Siddini V, Patil M, and Meshram HS
- Abstract
Competing Interests: We declare no competing interests.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Current Status, Challenges, and Opportunities of Organ Donation and Transplantation in India.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Meshram HS, Mahillo B, and Domínguez-Gil B
- Subjects
- Humans, India, Organ Transplantation, Tissue and Organ Procurement
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Preface: Meeting Report ISOT-2022, Nagpur:Collaborative Meeting Involving International, National, and Regional Transplant Organizations.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Balwani MR, Shroff S, and Abraham G
- Subjects
- Humans, Transplants, Organ Transplantation
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Gender Disparity in Asian-Pacific Countries: An Analysis of the ASTREG-WIT-KT Registry.
- Author
-
Han M, Wong G, Kute VB, Nakagawa Y, Wang HH, Arakama MH, Jeong JC, Cho YY, Thwin KT, Chapman J, Sapir-Pichhadze R, Mannon RB, Ahn C, and Kim YH
- Subjects
- Asia, Registries
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. De novo Donor-specific Anti-human Leukocyte Antigen Antibody and Its Outcome in Pediatric Renal Transplant Recipients: A Single-center Experience in India.
- Author
-
Saha A, Kapadia SF, Vala KB, Trivedi VB, Patel HV, Shah PR, and Kute VB
- Subjects
- Adult, Male, Humans, Child, Adolescent, Retrospective Studies, Graft Rejection prevention & control, HLA Antigens, Antibodies, Antilymphocyte Serum, Graft Survival, Isoantibodies, Transplant Recipients, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Development of de novo donor-specific anti-HLA antibody (dnDSA) is associated with poor graft survival in adults. However, there is a paucity of data about its prevalence and outcome in Indian children. We retrospectively assessed the proportion and spectrum of dnDSA and its outcome on antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR) and graft function. Children ≤18 years who were transplanted between November 2016 and October 2019 were included in this study. Pretransplant donor-specific antibody (DSA) was screened by complement-dependent cytotoxicity, flow cytometry crossmatch, and single antigen bead (SAB) class I and II by Luminex platform. Either antithymocyte globulin or basiliximab was used as induction. Tacrolimus, mycophenolate, and prednisolone were used for the maintenance of immunosuppression. SAB screening was done at 1, 3, 6 months, and yearly in seven children and at the time of acute graft dysfunction in eight. Mean fluorescence intensity ≥1000 was considered positive. Protocol biopsies were done at 3, 6, and 12 months and annually thereafter in seven children. Fifteen children, all males with a median age (interquartile range) of 13 years (11; 15.5) were analyzed. Only one child had pretransplant DSA who developed dnDSA posttransplant. Overall, 8 (53%) developed dnDSA over a median follow-up of 18 months. Seven (87%) had Class II, one Class I and 3 (37%) both Class I and II. Six had dQ and two had DR. All children with dnDSA had ABMR, of these two had subclinical rejection. DSAs persisted despite treatment, though graft function improved. Children with DSA and ABMR had lower graft function than those without DSA. The proportion of dnDSA was high in our study, majority against DQ. The detection of dnDSA prompted early diagnosis and treatment of ABMR., (Copyright © 2023 Copyright: © 2023 Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Social Media and Organ Donation: Pros and Cons.
- Author
-
Meena P, Kute VB, Bhargava V, Mondal R, and Agarwal SK
- Abstract
Shortage of organ donors is the most important obstacle standing in the way of lifesaving organ transplantation in a myriad of patients suffering from end-stage organ failure. It is vital that the transplant societies and associated appropriate authorities develop strategies to overcome the unmet needs for organ donation. The power of prominent social media (SoMe) platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, which reach millions of people, can increase awareness, provide education, and may ameliorate the pessimism toward organ donation among the general population. Additionally, public solicitation of organs may be helpful for waitlisted candidates for organ transplantation, who cannot find a suitable donor among near relations. However, the use of SoMe for organ donation has several ethical issues. This review attempts to highlight the advantages and limitations of using social media in the context of organ donation for transplantation. Some suggestions on the best utilization of social media platforms for organ donation while balancing ethical considerations have been highlighted here., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts of interest., (Copyright: © 2022 Indian Journal of Nephrology.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Current Scenarios of Pediatric Transplants of Kidney, Liver, Heart, and Lung in India: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Rela M, Gulati S, Bhalla AK, Abraham G, Chauhan S, Mishra V, and Meshram HS
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Kidney, Liver, Lung, Graft Survival, Registries, Graft Rejection, Organ Transplantation
- Abstract
Objectives: There is no systematic review and meta- analysis for pediatric solid-organ transplants in India. The objective of the study was to collect high-evidence data in this regard., Materials and Methods: A systematic review and meta- analysis was performed for pediatric solid-organ transplants in India. We used the search engines of PubMed, Google Scholar, PubMed Central, Embase, and MEDLINE from beginning of data availability until April 26, 2022. Data from 2 participating centers were also used. Analyses were performed by the DerSimonian random model., Results: Of 50 000 primary searches, only 31 studies were included for analysis. In total, data for pediatric kidney (n = 1057), liver (n = 914), and heart (n = 117) were reported. For the pediatric kidney, the 1-year, 5-year, and 10-year patient survival rates were 96% (range, 93%-99%; I² = 91.17%, H² = 11.33, P < .01), 90% (range, 85%-94%; I² = 93.54%, H² = 15.47, P < .01), and 75% (range, 62%-88%; I² = 97.36%, H² = 37.82, P < .01), respectively. The 1-year, 5-year, and 10-year renal graft survival rates were 93% (range, 90%-96%; I² = 63.82, H² = 2.76, P < .01), 83% (range, 76%-89%; I² = 86.39%, H² = 7.35, P < .01), and 66% (range, 57%-75%; I² = 81.68%, H² = 5.46, P < .01), respectively. The acute rejection rate was 23% (range, 20%-27%; I² = 5.44%, H² = 1.06, P = .39). For the pediatric liver transplant, the 1-year and 5-year survival rates were 92% (range, 89%-95%; I² = 49.96%, H² = 2, P < .04) and 88% (range, 85%-90%; I² = 0; H² = 1, P = .72), respectively., Conclusions: The outcomes of pediatric solid-organ transplants in India are comparable to those of the Western world. However, cause of graft loss and patient death is largely attributed to infections, unlike the experiences reported in the West. An effective registry is a primary pillar to expand pediatric solid- organ transplants in India.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Outcomes of Living Donor Kidney Transplant After SARS-CoV-2 Infection in Both the Donor and the Recipient: A Multicenter Study.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Aziz F, Abraham A, Ray DS, Pathak V, Siddini V, Hegde U, Chauhan S, Meshram HS, and Group I
- Subjects
- Humans, Living Donors, Graft Survival, Retrospective Studies, Creatinine, Treatment Outcome, SARS-CoV-2, Oxygen, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Kidney Transplantation methods, COVID-19
- Abstract
Objectives: Evidence on living donor kidney transplant procedures when both the donor and recipient have had a history of COVID-19 infection is scarce., Materials and Methods: We retrospectively explored the protocol, outcomes, and follow-up of 64 donors and recipients of living donor kidney transplant who had recovered from COVID-19. This was a multicenter (n = 12) study from India that included transplants between October 29, 2020, and December 1, 2021. Induction and immunosuppression regimens forthose with different severities of COVID-19 were similar to standard practice., Results: COVID-19 clinical severity ranged from asymptomatic/mild (not requiring oxygen therapy) in 49 recipients (77%) and 63 donors (95.4%) and moderate/severe (requiring oxygen therapy) in 15 recipients (23%) and 1 donor (4.6%). Mean wait time±SEM (SD)from firstdocumentednegative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction testto surgery for recipients and donors was 90.9 ± 9.27 (74.1) and 47 ± 4.5 (29.2) days, respectively. Six episodes (9.3%) of biopsy-proven acute rejection were reported at follow-up of 214 ± 14.8 (119) days and median of 227 (interquartile range, 109-309) days. The locally weighted scatter plot smoothing curve for creatinine during follow-up in donor-recipients pairs showed no trends of increased creatinine in the context of wait time from COVID-19 to transplant surgery. No graft loss, death, reactivation/reinfection, and complications related to surgery or COVID-19 were reported., Conclusions: Our report showed excellent outcomes and follow-up data of living donor kidney transplant in recovered donor-recipient pairs with the standard immunosuppression protocol. To our knowledge, this is the first and the largest study of donor-recipient living donor kidney transplant pairs when both donors and recipients had prior COVID-19.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. COVID-19 Vaccination in Solid-Organ Transplant: A Real-World Multicenter Experience.
- Author
-
Khomane P, Meshram HS, Banerjee S, Tambi P, Patel H, Patel A, Makwana MJ, Sharma S, Mishra V, and Kute VB
- Subjects
- ChAdOx1 nCoV-19, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Transplant Recipients, Treatment Outcome, Vaccination adverse effects, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 Vaccines adverse effects, Organ Transplantation
- Abstract
Objectives: India ranks third globally in organ procurement and transplant and has the second highest COVID-19 incidence rate, but data regarding COVID-19 vaccination in solid-organ transplant patients are scarce., Materials and Methods: We created a cross-sectional, anonymous, online questionnaire and sentinvitations to several transplant centers in India. We surveyed vaccine mandates, immunization coverage and side effects, administration timing, infection severity among solid-organ transplant recipients, and booster dosage recommendations., Results: The survey results showedthat vaccinepolicy is heterogeneous among centers; vaccination is voluntary at some centers (44.7%), but some centers have established COVID-19 vaccination as a requirement for transplant candidates (44.6%). CoviShield was the most common vaccine administered (89.3%), and more than 50% of transplant recipients and donors were fully vaccinated. Survey results showed that the pretransplant wait time after full vaccination (both doses) is 2 to 4 weeks (48.9%), and the optimal time for vaccination after transplant is 3 to 6 months (59.3%). For vaccinated transplant patients, 89.4% of respondents reported an incidence rate for posttransplant breakthrough infection of less than 25%. For unvaccinated patients, 38.3% ofrespondents reported a 25% to 50% incidence rate of posttransplant COVID- 19 infection. Booster doses are recommended at many transplant centers in India, as reported by 89.4% of survey respondents., Conclusions: The results of the survey suggested that there are no substantial safety concerns Future targets should include increasing efficacy and increasing booster doses of the COVID-19 vaccine.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Letter to the Editor in Response to Manla et al: Reply to Manla Et Al, Re: Global Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Solid Organ Transplant.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Rane H, Chauhan S, Mishra V, and Meshram HS
- Subjects
- Humans, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 epidemiology, Organ Transplantation adverse effects
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A Narrative Review COVID-19 in Solid-Organ Transplantation: Real-World Evidence From India.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Rela M, Abraham G, Gulati S, Bhalla AK, Chauhan S, Mishra VV, and Meshram HS
- Subjects
- COVID-19 Vaccines, Humans, Immunization, Passive, Living Donors, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Pandemics, Transplant Recipients, Treatment Outcome, COVID-19 Serotherapy, COVID-19 therapy, Kidney Transplantation, Organ Transplantation
- Abstract
Worldwide, India ranks number 2 and 3 for COVID-19 burden and absolute transplant numbers, respectively. Here, we summarized our single and multicenter Indian studies on solid-organ transplant during the COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, solid-organ transplants declined 40% to 50%. The mortality rate in COVID-19-positive kidney transplant recipients (11.6%) was lower in India compared with the developed world during the first wave and lower compared with maintenance hemodialysis patients (13% to 38%) but significantly higher compared with the nonimmunosuppressed general population (1% to 3%) in India. We contributed to National Organ and Tissue Transplant Organization transplant-related guidelines to increase safety and access to solid-organ transplant. We reported the safety and feasibility of remdesivir (n = 57) and convalescent plasma therapy (n = 10) in kidney transplant recipients. We reported 100% patient and graft survival without any complications related to COVID-19 in a large cohort of kidney transplant recipients who recovered from COVID-19 (n = 372) and a large cohort of kidney transplant recipients of living donors (n = 31) who recovered from COVID-19 without any change in induction and maintenance immunosuppression. COVID-19 disease severity and mortality in the second episode (reoccurring infection) was higher (46%) compared with the first episode (11.6%). There was 4.4% incidence of COVID-19-associated mucormycosis in kidney transplant recipients with mortality of 46% in the second wave. We reported COVID-19 vaccine safety with suboptimal efficacy in kidney transplant recipients and dialysis patients compared with the general population. Our report suggested that transplant with carefully selected COVID-19-recovered donors and patients may be feasible and safe, at least over the short term. Continued research is needed on vaccine efficacy, booster doses, and long-term follow up sequelae.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Effect of Coronavirus Disease 2019 on Transplantation and Nephrology in India: A Nationwide Report From India.
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kute VB, Swarnalatha G, Hegde U, Sharma A, Sahay M, Guleria S, Raju SB, Eapen JJ, Ray DS, Chaudhury AR, Patel HV, Siddini V, Pathak V, Agarwal D, Bahadur MM, Verma PP, Anandh U, Krishna A, Abraham A, and Mishra V
- Subjects
- Humans, India epidemiology, Public Sector, Retrospective Studies, COVID-19 epidemiology, Nephrology
- Abstract
Background: The effect of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) on a developing nation is sparsely reported and, more importantly, the discrepancies in public and private sectors are underexplored., Methods: We retrospectively investigated the data on the effect of COVID-19 on renal transplantation between 2019 and 2020 in a nationwide analysis from 8 public and 10 private sector hospitals of India., Results: On comparing the yearly data, the number of living-related transplants and deceased donor transplants declined by 48% (2610 vs 1370) and 49% (194 vs 99), respectively. The outpatient numbers and in-center admissions decreased by 40.4% (616,741 vs 367,962) and 30.8 % (73,190 vs 49,918). respectively. There was no increase in the number of renal or graft biopsies in the COVID-19 era. The number of waitlisted patients on hemodialysis was higher in public (304,898 vs 338,343) when compared with private (163,096 vs 150,292) in the last 2 years. Similarly, the number of waitlisted patients on peritoneal dialysis (4655 vs 3526) was higher in the public sector compared with private sector (932 vs 745). The decline in living transplants during the pandemic was higher in public sectors (58%) compared with the private (49%). However, the decline in deceased donation was higher in private (57.9%) relative to public (50.6%)., Conclusions: COVID-19 has adversely affected the transplantation activities across the Indian transplantation centers, with a disproportionately higher impact on waitlisted patients in public sector programs. A sound prioritization of health care resources is mandated to safeguard the most deprived and high-risk waitlisted patients during the pandemic., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. ISOT Consensus Statement for the Kidney Transplant Recipient and Living Donor with a Previous Diagnosis of COVID-19.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Guleria S, Bhalla AK, Sharma A, Agarwal SK, Sahay M, Varughese S, Prasad N, Varma PP, Shroff S, Vardhan H, Balwani M, Dave S, Bhadauria D, Rathi M, Agarwal D, Shah P, and Prakash J
- Abstract
Competing Interests: There are no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Mucormycosis as SARS-CoV2 sequelae in kidney transplant recipients: a single-center experience from India.
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kute VB, Chauhan S, Dave R, Patel H, Banerjee S, Desai S, Kumar D, Navadiya V, and Mishra V
- Subjects
- Adult, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Disease Progression, Humans, India epidemiology, RNA, Viral, SARS-CoV-2, Transplant Recipients, COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus drug therapy, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Mucormycosis drug therapy, Mucormycosis epidemiology, Mucormycosis etiology
- Abstract
Purpose: Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) sequelae in the transplant population are scarcely reported. Post-COVID-19 mucormycosis is one of such sequelae, which is a dreadful and rare entity. The purpose of this report was to study the full spectrum of this dual infection in kidney transplant recipients (KTR)., Methods: We did a comprehensive analysis of 11 mucormycosis cases in KTR who recovered from COVID-19 in IKDRC, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India during the study period from Nov 2020 to May 2021. We also looked for the risk factors for mucormycosis with a historical cohort of 157 KTR who did not develop mucormycosis., Results: The median age (interquartile range, range) of the cohort was 42 (33.5-50, 26-60) years with 54.5% diabetes. COVID-19 severity ranged from mild (n = 10) to severe cases (n = 1). The duration from COVID-19 recovery to presentation was 7 (7-7, 4-14) days. Ten cases were Rhino-orbital-cerebral-mucormycosis (ROCM) and one had pulmonary mucormycosis. Functional endoscopic sinus surgery (FESS) was performed in all cases of ROCM. The duration of antifungal therapy was 28 (24-30, 21-62) days. The mortality rate reported was 27%. The risk factors for post-transplant mucormycosis were diabetes (18% vs 54.5%; p-value = 0.01), lymphopenia [12 (10-18) vs 20 (12-26) %; p-value = 0.15] and a higher neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio [7 (4.6-8.3) vs 3.85 (3.3-5.8); p-value = 0.5]., Conclusion: The morbidity and mortality with post-COVID-19 mucormycosis are high. Post-transplant patients with diabetes are more prone to this dual infection. Preparedness and early identification is the key to improve the outcomes., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Global Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Solid Organ Transplant.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Tullius SG, Rane H, Chauhan S, Mishra V, and Meshram HS
- Subjects
- China, Humans, Pandemics, United States, COVID-19 epidemiology, Organ Transplantation, Tissue and Organ Procurement
- Abstract
Background: COVID-19 has drastically affected transplant services, but there is limited understanding of the discrepancy of COVID-19 effects on various regions of the world., Methods: We have explored the Global Observatory for Organ Donation and Transplantation data for assessing the transplant number changes between the calendar year 2019 (n = 157,301) and 2020 (129,681)., Results: There was a disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on different areas of the world. Globally, there was a decline of 17.5%, in which deceased donation, kidney (20.9%), pancreas (16.2%), lung (12.7%), liver (11.3%), and heart (8%) transplant declined disproportionally in different regions of the world. The pandemic affected almost all geographic regions and nations, but China and the United States were mostly able to recover from the initial halt of the transplant practices by the pandemic so that there was a cumulative increase in transplant numbers., Conclusions: Our data show that developing nations lagged behind, whereas developed nations have been able to recover their transplantation programs during the pandemic. Further policy making and preparedness is required to safeguard the most vulnerable areas of the world to minimize the impact of any future pandemic on transplantation practices., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. India: Gender Disparities in Organ Donation and Transplantation.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Chauhan S, Navadiya VV, Meshram HS, Patel HV, Engineer D, Banerjee S, Desai S, Shah N, Rizvi J, and Mishra VV
- Subjects
- Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, India, Surveys and Questionnaires, Organ Transplantation, Tissue and Organ Procurement
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare no funding or conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Rare and Unusual Follow-up Sequelae of Coronavirus Disease 2019: Splenic Mucormycosis in a Renal Transplant Recipient.
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kumar D, and Kute VB
- Subjects
- Anticoagulants, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Dexamethasone, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Oxygen, Sugars, COVID-19, Diabetes Mellitus etiology, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Mucormycosis etiology, Splenic Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is associated with adverse outcomes in transplantation communities. Mucormycosis, although a rare infection, has been classically linked to organ transplantation and is associated with exceptionally high morbidity and mortality rates. In this pandemic era, the double infection of mucormycosis and COVID-19 is a lethal combination but is rarely described in the literature on organ transplantation., Case Presentation: This article presents the case of a young kidney transplant recipient with diabetes who acquired severe COVID-19, followed by disseminated mucormycosis. The patient was a health care worker who developed severe COVID-19, for which he received remdesivir, anticoagulation, and dexamethasone. No immunomodulatory therapy was used. His maximum oxygen support was bilevel positive airway pressure ventilation. His sugar levels were frequently deranged during the stay. He developed secondary sepsis with Klebsiella, followed by nonhealing lung consolidation. He later developed pleural effusion and splenic abscess, which was detected incidentally. He underwent an emergency splenectomy, the culture of which yielded mucormycosis. Liposomal amphotericin B 5 mg/kg was administered. The patient deteriorated, and a repeat laparotomy yielded gastric perforation, with pus culture showing mucormycosis. The patient died after a long hospital stay., Conclusions: The diagnosis and management of this dual infection during the pandemic is extremely challenging. In this case, the unusual location of mucormycosis complicating COVID-19 calls for a meticulous approach to opportunistic fungal infections in organ transplant recipients who are positive for COVID-19, especially in those patients with diabetes., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Organ Donation after Circulatory Determination of Death in India: A Joint Position Paper.
- Author
-
Seth AK, Mohanka R, Navin S, Gokhale AG, Sharma A, Kumar A, Ramachandran B, Balakrishnan KR, Mirza D, Mehta D, Zirpe KG, Dhital K, Sahay M, Simha S, Sundaram R, Pandit R, Mani RK, Gursahani R, Gupta S, Kute VB, and Shroff S
- Abstract
Organ donation following circulatory determination of death (DCDD) has contributed significantly to the donor pool in several countries. In India, majority of deceased donations happen following brain death (BD). While existing legislation allows for DCDD, there have been only few reports of kidney transplantation following DCDD from India. This document, prepared by a multidisciplinary group of experts, reviews international best practices in DCDD and outlines the path for DCDD in India. Ethical, medical, legal, economic, procedural, and logistic challenges unique to India have been addressed. The practice of withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment (WLST) in India, laid down by the Supreme Court of India, is time-consuming, possible only in patients in a permanent vegetative state, and too cumbersome for day-to-day practice. In patients where continued medical care is futile, the procedure for WLST is described. In controlled DCDD (category-III), decision for WLST is independent of and delinked from the subsequent possibility of organ donation. Families that are inclined toward organ donation are explained the procedure including the timing and location of WLST, consent for antemortem measures, no-touch period, and the possibility of stand-down and return to the intensive care unit (ICU) without donation. In donation following neurologic determination of death (DNDD), if cardiac arrest occurs during the process of BD declaration, the protocol for DCDD category-IV has been described in detail. In DCDD category-V, organ donation may be possible following unsuccessful cardiopulmonary resuscitation of cardiac arrest in the ICU. An outline of organ-specific requisites for kidney, liver, heart, and lung transplantation following DCDD and techniques, such as normothermic regional perfusion (nRP) and ex vivo machine perfusion, has been provided. The outcomes of transplantation following DCDD are comparable to those following DBDD or living donor transplantation. Documents and checklists necessary for successful execution of DCDD in India are described., How to Cite This Article: Seth AK, Mohanka R, Navin S, Gokhale AGK, Sharma A, Kumar A, et al . Organ Donation after Circulatory Determination of Death in India: A Joint Position Paper. Indian J Crit Care Med 2022;26(4):421-438., Competing Interests: Source of support: Nil Conflict of interest: None, (Copyright © 2022; Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers (P) Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Safety and Tolerability of Remdesivir in Patients with End-stage Renal Disease on Maintenance Hemodialysis.
- Author
-
Shah MK, Parikh M, Prajapati D, Kute VB, Bhende P, Prajapati A, Chhajwani SH, Yajnik K, Ganjiwale J, Mannari JG, and Vaishnav B
- Abstract
Introduction: The use of remdesivir is not recommended in patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection unless potential advantage offset disadvantage due to limited safety data. Our objective was to assess the safety of remdesivir in patients with end-stage renal failure and evaluate the outcome of this vulnerable group., Methodology: We carried out a retrospective observational study in dialysis-dependent ESRD patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection who received a standard 5-day course of remdesivir (powder form) from June 2020 to December 2020. Oxygen requirement, hemogram, inflammatory markers, and liver function tests before and after remdesivir treatment were compared., Result: We found thirty-nine such patients with mean age of patients 58.79 ± 12.13 years. Diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and cardiac diseases were present in 58.97, 87.17, and 23.07% of patients, respectively. Mean oxygen saturation on admission was 85.41% (±7.73). There were no events of hepatotoxicity, altered behavior, or infusion reaction. There was statistically significant improvement in total leukocyte count, absolute lymphocyte counts, and C-reactive protein ( p value <0.001, 0.01, and 0.02, respectively) post remdesivir treatment. A total of 60% of patients had improved oxygenation while 13% of patients had no change in oxygen requirement after completion of remdesivir course. Mortality in our study was 28.21%. We did not find any significant benefit of early remdesivir administration (3-6 days of illness) on mortality or days of hospitalization., Conclusion: The use of remdesivir in end-stage kidney disease is safe. Improvement in oxygenation was significant when baseline oxygen requirement was less. It requires prospective controlled trials with larger population to assess its impact on mortality., How to Cite This Article: Shah MK, Parikh M, Prajapati D, Kute VB, Bhende P, Prajapati A, et al. Safety and Tolerability of Remdesivir in Patients with End-stage Renal Disease on Maintenance Hemodialysis. Indian J Crit Care Med 2022;26(5):619-625., Competing Interests: Source of support: Nil Conflict of interest: None, (Copyright © 2022; The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. COVID-19 in Hemodialysis Patients: Experience from a Western Indian Center.
- Author
-
Banerjee S, Patel HV, Engineer DP, Gupta V, Patel H, Gupta A, Shah PR, and Kute VB
- Abstract
Introduction: Chronic kidney disease patients on hemodialysis (CKD-5D) are among the worst hit by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Need to travel for dialysis, comorbidities, and immunosuppressive state put them at risk of severe disease and poor outcomes. We report our experience of COVID-19 in a cohort of CKD-5D from a public sector tertiary-care center from western India., Material and Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the records of 58 CKD-5D patients with confirmed COVID-19 admitted to our COVID-19 hospital. Suspected COVID-19, acute kidney injury (AKI), or AKI on CKD were excluded. We studied the clinical, demographic, radiological, and laboratory profiles; treatment; and outcomes of the patients. We assessed the potential clinical and laboratory parameters to predict mortality., Results: The mean age of the patients was 48.7 ± 16.9 years, with 55% males. Comorbidities included hypertension (65%), diabetes (19%), and cardiovascular disease (15.5%). The presenting features included fever (69%), respiratory distress (50%), upper respiratory symptoms (36%), and diarrhea (13%). Five (8.6%) were asymptomatic. Bilateral infiltrates on chest imaging were the commonest radiological pattern. The patients were managed with oxygenation, hydroxychloroquine, steroids, anticoagulation, remdesivir, and favipiravir. Twenty-two (37.9%) patients died, predominantly due to respiratory failure. Disease severity and C-reactive protein (CRP) above 175 mg/L at admission were the only parameters predictive of mortality., Conclusion: CKD-5D patients with COVID-19 were less likely to present with the classical syndrome of fever and respiratory distress compared with reports from the general population and had higher mortality. Only disease severity and high CRP (>175 mg/L) were predictive of mortality in our cohort., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts of interest., (Copyright: © 2021 Indian Journal of Nephrology.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Management strategies and outcomes in renal transplant recipients recovering from COVID-19: A retrospective, multicentre, cohort study.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Ray DS, Aziz F, Godara SM, Hegde U, KumarBT A, Bhalla AK, Yadav DK, Singh S, Pathak V, Dalal S, Bahadur MM, Anandh U, Abraham M A, Siddini V, Das SS, Thukral S, Krishnakumar A, Sharma A, Kher V, Bansal SB, Shingare A, Narayanan R, Patel H, Gulati S, Kakde S, Bansal D, Guleria S, Khullar D, Gumber MR, Varyani U, Guditi S, Khetan P, Dave R, Mishra VV, Tullius SG, Chauhan S, and Meshram HS
- Abstract
Background: There is an enormous knowledge gap on management strategies, clinical outcomes, and follow-up after kidney transplantation (KT) in recipients that have recovered from coronavirus disease (COVID-19)., Methods: We conducted a multi-center, retrospective analysis in 23 Indian transplant centres between June 26, 2020 to December 1, 2021 on KT recipients who recovered after COVID-19 infections. We analyzed clinical and biopsy-confirmed acute rejection (AR) incidence and used cox-proportional modeling to estimate multivariate-adjusted hazard ratios (HR) for predictors of AR. We also performed competing risk analysis. Additional outcome measures included graft loss, all-cause mortality, waiting time from a positive real-time polymerase test (RT-PCR) to KT, laboratory parameters, and quality of life in follow-up., Findings: Among 372 KT which included 38(10·21%) ABO-incompatible, 12(3·22%) sensitized, 64(17·20%) coexisting donors with COVID-19 history and 20 (5·37%) recipients with residual radiographic abnormalities, the incidence of AR was 34 (9·1%) with 1(0·26%) death censored graft loss, and 4(1·07%) all-cause mortality over a median (interquartile range) follow-up of 241 (106-350) days. In our cox hazard proportional analysis, absence of oxygen requirement during COVID-19 compared to oxygen need [HR = 0·14(0·03-0·59); p -value = 0·0071], and use of thymoglobulin use compared to other induction strategies [HR = 0·17(0·03-0.95); p -value = 0·044] had a lower risk for AR. Degree of Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) DR mismatch had the highest risk of AR [HR = 10.2(1·74-65·83); p -value = 0·011]. With competing risk analysis, with death as a competing event, HLA DR mismatch, and oxygen requirement continued to be associated with AR. Age, gender, obesity, inflammatory markers, dialysis vintage, steroid use, sensitization and ABO-incompatibility have not been associated with a higher risk of AR. The median duration between COVID-19 real time polymerase test negativity to transplant was 88(40-145) days (overall), and ranged from 88(40-137), 65(42-120), 110(49-190), and 127(64-161) days in World Health Organization ordinal scale ≤ 3, 4, 5, and 6-7, respectively. There was no difference in quality of life, tacrolimus levels, blood counts, and mean serum creatinine assessed in patients with a past COVID-19 infection independent of severity., Interpretation: Our findings support that the outcomes of KT after COVID-19 recovery are excellent with absence of COVID-19 sequelae during follow-up. Additionally, there does not seem to be a need for changes in the induction/immunosuppression regimen based on the severity of COVID-19., Funding: Sanofi., Competing Interests: All authors declare no competing interests, (© 2022 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Safety and efficacy of Oxford vaccine in kidney transplant recipients: A single-center prospective analysis from India.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Shah N, Meshram HS, Banerjee S, Chauhan S, Dave R, Desai S, Patel H, and Mishra V
- Subjects
- Adult, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, India, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Antibody Formation, ChAdOx1 nCoV-19, Kidney Transplantation
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. COVID-19 Pandemic Research Opportunities in India: What the Pandemic Is Teaching Us About Transplantation.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Meshram HS, Chauhan S, Shah N, Patel AH, Patel HV, Engineer D, Banerjee S, Dave R, and Mishra VV
- Subjects
- Humans, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Treatment Outcome, COVID-19 epidemiology, Organ Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has engulfed the whole world, and India has been the second worst-hit nation. Organ transplant services were halted in both the public and private care sectors of India, with public care sectors more adversely affected. Deceased donations were disproportionately more affected, with unfavorable rates at the peak of the pandemic. Mortality outcomes of COVID-19 among different organ transplant recipients in India have been lower compared with the Western world, with younger age and less comorbidities among Indian populations partly responsible for the lower mortality. Mortality and graft loss were mostly associated with older age and those with chronic graft dysfunction. During the pandemic, invasive fungal infections, like mucormycosis, have been reported, illustrating the need for multidisciplinary management. The Indian transplant societies have formulated and timely revised guidelines for transplantation in the COVID-19 era. Living donor transplants (both liver and kidney) after recovery from COVID-19 were both first described in India, providing a guiding tool for the world. Follow-up reports of recovered solid-organ transplant recipients have also been reported in Indian studies, showing reassuring long-term outcomes. Data of breakthrough COVID-19 cases after vaccination among both transplant recipients and waitlist candidates and research in vaccine efficacy for solid-organ transplant recipients is still underway. We suggest continuing and intensifying research activities for a better plan and strategy in case of a future pandemic.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Consequences of the first and second COVID-19 wave on kidney transplant recipients at a large Indian transplant centre.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Meshram HS, Navadiya VV, Chauhan S, Patel DD, Desai SN, Shah N, Dave RB, Banerjee S, Engineer DP, Patel HV, Rizvi SJ, and Mishra VV
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Antiviral Agents administration & dosage, Antiviral Agents classification, Comorbidity, Female, Humans, Immunosuppression Therapy methods, Immunosuppression Therapy statistics & numerical data, India epidemiology, Intensive Care Units statistics & numerical data, Male, Mortality, Postoperative Period, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, Symptom Assessment methods, Symptom Assessment statistics & numerical data, COVID-19 blood, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 therapy, Kidney Failure, Chronic epidemiology, Kidney Failure, Chronic surgery, Kidney Transplantation methods, Kidney Transplantation statistics & numerical data, Transplant Recipients statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: There is a scarcity of data comparing the consequences of first and second COVID-19 waves on kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) in India., Methods: We conducted a single-centre retrospective study of 259 KTRs with COVID-19 to compare first wave (March 15-December 31 2020, n = 157) and second wave (April 1-May 31 2021, n = 102)., Results: KTRs during second wave were younger (43 vs. 40 years; p-value .04) and also included paediatric patients (0 vs. 5.9%; p-value .003). Symptoms were milder during the second wave (45 vs. 62.7%; p-value .007); COVID-19 positive patients had less frequent cough (32 vs. 13.8%; p-value .001), fever was less frequent (58 vs. 37%; p-value .001), and we observed fewer co-morbidities (11 vs. 20.6%; p-value .04). The percentages of neutrophils (77 vs. 83%; p-value .001) and serum ferritin (439 vs. 688; p-value .0006) were higher during second wave, while lymphocyte counts were reduced (20 vs. 14%; p-value .0001). Hydroxychloroquine (11 vs. 0%; p-value .0001) and tocilizumab (7 vs. 0%; p-value .004) were more frequently prescribed during first wave, while utilization of dexamethasone (6 vs. 27%; p-value .0001) and remdesivir (47 vs. 65%; p-value .03) increased during the second wave. Mucormycosis (1.3 vs. 10%; p-value .01) and ICU admissions (20 vs. 37.2%; p-value .002) were more frequent during second wave. The 28-day mortality rate (9.6 vs. 10%; p-value 1) was not different., Conclusions: There has been a different clinical spectrum of COVID-19 amongst KTR with similar mortality between the two waves at a large Indian transplant centre., (© 2021 Asian Pacific Society of Nephrology.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Comparative Analysis of Kidney Transplant Recipients with Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Compared with Nonkidney Transplant Recipients: A Largest Single-center Report from the Second Wave of Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic in South East Asia.
- Author
-
Chauhan S, Meshram HS, Kute VB, Patel H, Deshmukh S, Desai S, Dave R, and Banerjee S
- Subjects
- Humans, Asia, Eastern, Pandemics, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, Transplant Recipients, COVID-19 epidemiology, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Outcomes of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 in kidney transplant recipients (KTR) compared with matched cohort are certainly lacking for different pandemic waves and geographic regions. In this single-center retrospective study of coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) cases admitted during March 26, 2021 to June 7, 2021, a propensity-matched analysis in a 1:1 ratio was performed to compare the clinical profile and outcomes between KTR and non-KTR. A Cox proportional hazard model from the whole study population to analyze risk factors for severe disease and mortality was calculated. We identified 1052 COVID-19 cases, of which 107 (10.1%) were KTR. In propensity-matched analysis, KTR had higher fever (81.6 % vs. 60%; P = 0.01), lymphopenia (30% vs. 11.7%; P = 0.02), higher neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (43.3% vs. 25%; P = 0.05), and acute kidney injury (66.6% vs. 36.7%; P = 0.001). In Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, there was no difference in mortality or severity of COVID-19. In Cox hazard proportional analysis, the European cooperative oncology group (ECOG) score of 1 to 2 [Hazard ratio (HR) 95% lower confidence interval (CI), upper CI = 4.9 (1.8-13.5); P <0.01], ECOG of >2 [HR = 20 (7.5, 54.7); P <0.01] and waitlisted status [HR = 1.9 (1.1-3.3); P = 0.02] was associated with significant mortality. Kidney transplantation [HR = 0.8 (0.47-1.44); P = 0.5] was not associated with mortality in the analysis. In our report, kidney transplantation status had a different spectrum but was not found to be independently associated with COVID-19 severity or mortality., Competing Interests: None
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Transplantation in India and China during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Meshram HS, Mahillo B, and Dominguez-Gil B
- Subjects
- China epidemiology, Humans, India epidemiology, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Pandemics prevention & control
- Abstract
Competing Interests: We declare no competing interests.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Impact of COVID-19-associated Mucormycosis in Kidney Transplant Recipients: A Multicenter Cohort Study.
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kute VB, Yadav DK, Godara S, Dalal S, Guleria S, Bhalla AK, Pathak V, Anandh U, Bansal S, Patel H, Hegde U, Dave R, Chauhan S, Dave R, Kumar D, Jamale T, Bajpai D, Kenwar D, Sil K, Vardhan H, Balwani M, Patil M, Deshpande R, Nandwani A, Jha PK, Jain M, Das P, Mishra V, Segev DL, and Kher V
- Abstract
Background: COVID-19-associated mucormycosis (CAM) is a recently emerging entity. There is a lack of reports of CAM in organ transplant recipients., Methods: We conducted a multicenter (n = 18) retrospective research in India during November 2020 to July 2021. The purpose of this study was to explore the clinical spectrum, outcome and risk factors for mortality of CAM in kidney transplant recipients (KTRs)., Results: The incidence of CAM was 4.4% (61/1382 COVID-19-positive KTRs) with 26.2% mortality. The median age of the cohort was 45 (38-54) y. Twenty (32%) were not hospitalized and 14 (22.9%) were on room air during COVID-19. The proportion of postdischarge CAM was 59.1%, while concurrent CAM was reported in 40.9%. The presentation of CAM was 91.8% rhino-orbital-cerebral mucormycosis and 8.2% pulmonary with 19.6% and 100% mortality, respectively. In the univariable analysis, older age, obesity, difficulty of breathing, high-flow oxygen requirement, and delay in starting therapy were significantly associated with mortality. In the multivariable logistic regression analysis, patients requiring high-flow oxygen therapy [odds ratio (95% confidence interval) = 9.3 (1.6-51); P = 0.01] and obesity [odds ratio (95% confidence interval) = 5.2 (1-28); P = 0.05] was associated with mortality. The median follow-up of the study was 60 (35-60) d., Conclusions: We describe the largest case series of CAM in KTRs. Morality in pulmonary CAM is extremely high. Severe COVID-19 pose extra risk for the development of CAM and associated mortality. Our report will help in better understanding the conundrum and management of CAM., Competing Interests: The authors declare no funding or conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Transplantation Direct. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A Propensity-Matched Analysis of COVID-19 in Kidney Transplant Recipients Compared With Non-Kidney Transplant Patients: A Single-Center Report From India.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Meshram HS, Chauhan S, Patel H, Banerjee S, Desai S, Navadiya V, Dave R, Deshmukh S, and Mishra V
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Incidence, India epidemiology, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Proportional Hazards Models, Retrospective Studies, Transplant Recipients, Treatment Outcome, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 mortality, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Objectives: Comparisons of COVID-19 incidence between kidney transplant recipients and patients who did not receive kidney transplant are underexplored in various geographic regions., Materials and Methods: This Indian, single-center, retrospective study analyzed COVID-19 data of patients hospitalized between May 12, 2020, and January 11, 2021. A propensity matching score was used to compare outcomes between the 2 groups. We also used multivariable Cox proportional hazard analyses to assess association of kidney transplantation with mortality., Results: Of the 1627 COVID-19 cases, 179 were kidney transplant recipients and 1448 were not kidney transplant patients (control group). Ofthe 436 reported in-hospital deaths, 20 (11.1%) were in the kidney transplant group and 416 (28.7%) were in the control group. Propensity matching identified 98 kidney transplantrecipients and167 controlpatients. InKaplanMeier survival plots for these patients, there was no statistical difference in mortality (log-rank, Mantel Cox test; P = .07) or severity (log-rank, Mantel Cox test; P = .07) with regard to COVID-19. In Cox analysis, age groups from 61 to 70 years (hazard ratio = 1.5; 95% CI, 1.0-2.2; P = .04), 71 to 80 years (hazard ratio = 1.64; 95% CI, 1.0-2.5; P = .02), and >80 years (hazard ratio = 1.91; 95% CI, 1.1-3.1; P = .01)were associatedwith statistically significant greater mortality.Having a kidney transplant (hazard ratio = 0.43; 95% CI, 0.3-0.7; P = 0.001) was not associated with mortality., Conclusions: In our analysis, age was the most important predictor of mortality. Kidney transplant status was not found to have an independent association with mortality and severity.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Renal graft artery thrombosis following COVID-19 infection.
- Author
-
Varma PP, Kute VB, and Bajpai G
- Subjects
- Angiography methods, COVID-19 Testing methods, Fibrin Fibrinogen Degradation Products analysis, Graft Survival, Humans, Immunocompromised Host, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Failure, COVID-19 blood, COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 diagnosis, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Kidney Transplantation methods, Postoperative Complications blood, Postoperative Complications physiopathology, Postoperative Complications virology, Renal Artery diagnostic imaging, Renal Artery pathology, Renal Artery Obstruction diagnosis, Renal Artery Obstruction etiology, Renal Artery Obstruction physiopathology, Thrombolytic Therapy adverse effects, Thrombolytic Therapy methods, Thrombosis diagnosis, Thrombosis etiology, Thrombosis physiopathology, Transplants blood supply
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. A Multicenter Cohort Study of Indian Centers on Reoccurring SARS-CoV-2 Infections in Kidney Transplant Recipients.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Hegde U, Das P, Sharma A, Bahadur MM, Sil K, Guleria S, Varma PP, Jamale T, and Meshram HS
- Subjects
- COVID-19 Testing, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Humans, Infant, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, Transplant Recipients, COVID-19, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Objectives: There is scarcity of data on reoccurrence of SARS-CoV-2 infections in kidney transplant recipients., Materials and Methods: We conducted a retrospective multicenter cohort study and identified 13 kidney transplant recipients (10 living and 3 deceased donors) with recurrent COVID-19, and here we report demographics, immunosuppression regimens, clinical profiles, treatments, and outcomes., Results: COVID-19 second infection rate was 0.9% (13/1350) in kidney transplant recipients with a median age of 46 years; median time interval from transplant to first episode of COVID-19 diagnosis was 9.2 months (interquartile range, 2.2-46.5 months). The most common comorbidities were hypertension (84%) and diabetes (23%). Fever was significantly less common with recurrent COVID-19. COVID-19 severity ranged from asymptomatic (23%), mild (31%), and moderate (46%) during the first infection and asymptomatic (8%), mild (46%), and severe (46%) in the second infection. All 6 kidney transplant recipients with severe second infections died. The median interval between the 2 episodes based upon reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction COVID-19-positive tests was 135 days (interquartile range, 71-274 days) without symptoms. Statistically significant risk factors for mortality were dyspnea (P = .04), disease severity (P = .004), allograft dysfunction (P < .05), higher levels of neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (P = .05), and intensive care unit/ventilator requirement (P = .004). Although our limited resources did not allow for molecular diagnostics and typing, we suggest that these second episodes were reinfections with SARS-CoV-2., Conclusions: To our knowledge, this is the largest study of kidney transplant recipients with reoccurring SARS-CoV-2 infection, and we observed 46% mortality.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Is Early COVID-19 in Kidney Transplant Recipients Concerning Enough to Halt Transplantation? A Multicenter Comparative Analysis from India.
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kute VB, Patel HV, Hegde U, Das P, Sil K, Sahay M, Raju SB, Chaudhury AR, Siddini V, Pathak V, Bahadur MM, Anand U, Krishna A, Abraham A, Patel AH, Mishra V, and Chauhan S
- Subjects
- Adult, Communicable Disease Control, Female, Humans, India, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, COVID-19 complications, Kidney Transplantation, Transplant Recipients
- Abstract
Background: Limited data exist on the incidence and outcome of early coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in kidney transplantation recipients (KTR)., Methods: A retrospective multicenter research study was conducted across 12 centers in India. We explored the symptomatology, demographic, laboratory findings, and outcome of COVID-19 within 30 days of transplantation. The outcome was compared with the overall KTR and waitlisted patients acquiring COVID-19., Results: The incidence of early COVID-19 was 2.6% (n = 22) for the cumulative 838 renal transplants performed since nationwide lockdown in March 2020 until May 2021. Overall, 1049 KTR were diagnosed with COVID-19 and 2% of those had early COVID-19. The median age of the early COVID-19 cohort was 43 (31-46) years. COVID-19 severity ranged from asymptomatic (18.2%), mild (59.1%), moderate (9.1%), and severe (13.6%). Among clinical symptoms, dyspnea and anosmia were frequent, and in laboratory parameters, neutrophil lymphocyte ratio, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, and D-dimer were higher in patients requiring oxygen. The mortality in early COVID-19 was not higher than overall KTR (4.5% vs 8.5%; P = 1). COVID-19 severity (23.9% vs 15.7%; P = .0001) and mortality (15.5% vs 8.5%; P = .001) among waitlisted patients (n = 1703) were higher compared with overall KTR., Conclusions: We report higher burden of COVID-19 in waitlisted patients compared with KTR and a favorable outcome in early COVID-19 in KTR. Our report will help the transplant physicians in dealing with the ongoing dilemma of halting or resuming transplantation in the COVID-19 era., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A case report of successful kidney transplantation from a deceased donor with terminal COVID-19-related lung damage: Ongoing dilemma between discarding and accepting organs in COVID-19 era!
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kute VB, Patel H, Desai S, Chauhan S, and Dave RB
- Subjects
- Humans, Lung diagnostic imaging, Lung surgery, SARS-CoV-2, Tissue Donors, COVID-19, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Fatal outcome subsequent to reoccurring SARS-CoV2 infection in a kidney transplant recipient.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Meshram HS, Patel HV, Engineer D, Chauhan S, Banerjee S, Navadiya VV, Desai S, Patel AH, Deshumkh S, Dave R, and Mishra VV
- Subjects
- Humans, RNA, Viral, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. COVID-19 in Kidney Transplant Recipients Vaccinated With Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 Vaccine (Covishield): A Single-center Experience From India.
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kute VB, Shah N, Chauhan S, Navadiya VV, Patel AH, Patel HV, Engineer D, Banerjee S, Rizvi J, and Mishra VV
- Subjects
- COVID-19 Vaccines, Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Transplant Recipients, COVID-19, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare no funding or conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Clinical Profiles and Outcomes of COVID-19 in Kidney Transplant Recipients: Experience From a High-Volume Public Sector Transplant Center in India.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Meshram HS, Patel HV, Engineer D, Banerjee S, Navadiya VV, Patel DD, Gupta A, Chauhan S, and Mishra VV
- Subjects
- Adult, COVID-19 mortality, Female, Hospitals, Public, Humans, Immunosuppression Therapy, India epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, COVID-19 epidemiology, Kidney Transplantation, Transplant Recipients
- Abstract
Objectives: Data are so far limited on outcomes of kidney transplant recipients with COVID-19 seen at public sector hospitals in developing countries with limited resources., Materials and Methods: We retrospectively investigated a cohort of 157 kidney transplant recipients (75% living and 25% deceased donors) seen at a public sector transplant hospital in India from March to December 2020 who had reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction tests that confirmed COVID-19. Demographic data, immunosuppression regimens, clinical profiles, treatments, and outcomes were analyzed. In our center, maintenance immunosuppression was reduced according to disease severity and case-by-case evaluations. There were also 53 patients with asymptomatic or mild COVID-19 symptoms who received home care to optimize the utilization of scarce resources during travel restrictions., Results: In our kidney transplant recipient group, median age was 43 years (133 male; 24 female patients); recipients presented at a median of 4 years after transplant. The most common comorbidities included arterial hypertension (73%) and diabetes (24%); presenting symptoms at the time of COVID-19 positivity included cough (49%), fever (58%), and sputum production (32%). Clinical severity ranged from asymptomatic (4%), mild (45%), moderate (31%), and severe (20%) disease. Statistically significant risk factors for mortality included older age, dyspnea, severe disease, obesity, allograft dysfunction prior to COVID-19, acute kidney injury, higher levels of inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein, interleukin 6, procalcitonin), abnormality in chest radiography, and intensive care/ventilator requirements (P < .05). Overall patient mortality was 9.5% (15/157) in hospitalized patients, 21% (15/71) in patients in the intensive care unit, 100% (15/15) in patients who required ventilation, and 0% among those in home treatment., Conclusions: The mortality rate in kidney transplant recipients with COVID-19 was higher than in the nonimmunosuppressed general population (1.2%) in India. To our knowledge, this is a largest single-center study of kidney transplant recipients with COVID-19 so far.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. BK polyomavirus infection following COVID-19 infection in renal transplant recipients: a single-center experience.
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kute VB, and Chauhan S
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Feasibility and safety of remdesivir in SARS-CoV2 infected renal transplant recipients: A retrospective cohort from a developing nation.
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kute VB, Patel H, Banerjee S, Navadiya V, Desai S, Rizvi SJ, Mishra V, and Chauhan S
- Subjects
- Adenosine Monophosphate analogs & derivatives, Adult, Alanine analogs & derivatives, Developing Countries, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Middle Aged, RNA, Viral, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, Transplant Recipients, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, COVID-19 Drug Treatment
- Abstract
Introduction: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV2) infection has drastically impacted the transplant communities. Remdesivir (RDV) has shown some promising results in coronavirus disease (COVID-19) albeit with low certainty. Data in kidney transplant recipients (KTR) are still lacking., Methods: This was a retrospective cohort of 57 moderate to severe COVID-19 positive KTR in a single center who received RDV as a part of COVID-19 management. No dose adjustments were done. The outcomes were measured as acute kidney injury (AKI) recovery; liver function tests abnormalities; other side effects; graft loss and death., Results: The median (inter-quartile range) age of presentation was 44 (31-51) years. The duration from onset of symptoms to RDV initiation was 6 (5-7) days. Thirty-two (56%) cases received RDV on the day of admission. Forty-six (81%) cases were on oxygen support upon initiation of RDV. Thirty-eight (66.6%) cases had acute kidney injury on admission. The median baseline, admission, and 28-day follow-up serum creatinine of the cohort were 1.59 (1.1-2.1), 2.13 (1.3-3.1), and 1.58 (1.05-2.1) mg/dl, respectively. A total of 8(14%) cases died in the study with 1 (1.7%) graft loss. All those cases that died were on oxygen therapy at the time of initiation of RDV. No liver function derangements or any other major adverse events with the drug were reported., Conclusion: RDV therapy is safe and clinically feasible in renal transplant recipients as seen in our cohort. Larger clinical registries and randomized clinical trials should be conducted to further explore the efficacy in transplant recipients., (© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Mucormycosis in post-COVID-19 renal transplant patients: A lethal complication in follow-up.
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kute VB, Chauhan S, and Desai S
- Subjects
- Follow-Up Studies, Humans, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Mucormycosis diagnosis, Mucormycosis drug therapy, Mucormycosis etiology
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. On the Way to Self-sufficiency: Improving Deceased Organ Donation in India.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Ramesh V, and Rela M
- Subjects
- Awareness, Brain Death legislation & jurisprudence, Delivery of Health Care, Humans, India, Organ Transplantation statistics & numerical data, Tissue and Organ Procurement legislation & jurisprudence, Tissue and Organ Procurement statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare no funding or conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Nephrology and Transplant Services and Clinical Training in India.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Gupta A, Patel HV, Engineer DP, Banerjee S, Rizvi SJ, Mishra VV, Patel AH, and Navadiya VV
- Subjects
- Humans, India epidemiology, Prospective Studies, COVID-19 epidemiology, Delivery of Health Care, Kidney Diseases therapy, Kidney Transplantation statistics & numerical data, Nephrology education
- Abstract
Objectives: COVID-19 has emerged as a global pandemic with significant impacts on health care systems. The present study was conducted to analyze the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on nephrology and transplant services and clinical training at our center., Materials and Methods: This observational study was conducted at the Institute of Kidney Disease and Research Centre (Ahmedabad, India). Our institute is one of the largest tertiary care centers of its kind in India with around 400 total inpatient beds for nephrology, urology, and transplant patients. In 2019, our center had annual outpatient and inpatient numbers of 132 181 and 7471, respectively, and conducted 412 renal transplant procedures. For this study, monthly data on number of outpatients, inpatients, and patients undergoing renal transplant, as well as various nonelective procedures, conducted in 2019 and 2020 were collected and analyzed. We investigated the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on various non-COVID-19-related health care facilities and on clinical training and research activities at our institute., Results: During the 2020 COVID-19 period, the number of outpatients and inpatients was greatly reduced compared with data from 2019. A similar decrease was seen in patients undergoing hemodialysis, renal transplant, and nonelective procedures at our center. The COVID-19 period also greatly affected clinical training of residents enrolled at our institute and research activities, as a result of focus on COVID-19 as a priority., Conclusions: The effects of reduced numbers of outpatients and inpatients on workflow, as well as reduced numbers of renal transplants and nonelective procedures on the health of our patients, are unknown. Hence, a strategic scheme is needed to develop new health care models that can help manage the COVID-19 pandemic at present and any further waves arising in the future.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A Multicenter Cohort Study From India of 75 Kidney Transplants in Recipients Recovered After COVID-19.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Ray DS, Yadav DK, Pathak V, Bhalla AK, Godara S, Kumar A, Guleria S, Khullar D, Thukral S, Mondal RRS, Jain M, Jha PK, Hegde U, Abraham M A, Dalal S, Patel H, Bahadur MM, Shingare A, Sharma A, Kumar Sharma R, Anandh U, Gulati S, Gumber M, Siddini V, Deshpande R, Kaswan K, Varyani U, Kakde S, Kenwar DB, Shankar Meshram H, and Kher V
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, COVID-19 diagnosis, Donor Selection methods, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, India, Kidney Failure, Chronic complications, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Selection, Retrospective Studies, Survivors, Treatment Outcome, COVID-19 complications, Kidney Failure, Chronic surgery, Kidney Transplantation
- Abstract
Background: There is limited current knowledge on feasibility and safety of kidney transplantation in coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) survivors., Methods: We present a retrospective cohort study of 75 kidney transplants in patients who recovered from polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-confirmed COVID-19 performed across 22 transplant centers in India from July 3, 2020, to January 31, 2021. We detail demographics, clinical manifestations, immunosuppression regimen, laboratory findings, treatment, and outcomes. Patients with a previous diagnosis of COVID-19 were accepted after documenting 2 negative severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 PCR tests, normal chest imaging with complete resolution of symptom for at least 28 d and significant social distancing for 14 d before surgery., Results: Clinical severity in patients ranged from asymptomatic (n = 17, 22.7%), mild (n = 36.48%), moderate (n = 15.20%), and severe (n = 7.9.3%) disease. Median duration between PCR positive to transplant was 60 d (overall) and increased significantly from asymptomatic, mild, moderate, and severe disease (49, 57, 83, 94 d, P 0.019), respectively. All recipients and donors were asymptomatic with normal creatinine after surgery at a median (interquartile range) follow-up of 81 (56-117) d without any complications relating to surgery or COVID-19. Patient and graft survival was 100%, and acute rejection was reported in 6.6%., Conclusions: Prospective kidney transplant recipients post-COVID-19 can be considered for transplantation after comprehensive donor and recipient screening before surgery using a combination of clinical, radiologic, and laboratory criteria, careful pretransplant evaluation, and individualized risk-benefit analysis. Further large-scale prospective studies with longer follow-up will better clarify our initial findings. To date, this remains the first and the largest study of kidney transplantation in COVID-19 survivors., Competing Interests: The authors declare no funding or conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Cytomegalovirus and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Co-infection in Renal Transplants: A Retrospective Study from a Single Center.
- Author
-
Meshram HS, Kute VB, Patel H, Banerjee S, Desai S, and Chauhan S
- Subjects
- Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Cytomegalovirus, Humans, Immunization, Passive, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 Serotherapy, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 therapy, Coinfection, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
There is a scarcity of data regarding the impact of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection complicating the coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) course. The objective of the study was to explore the clinical profile and outcome of CMV co-infection with COVID-19. This is a single-center retrospective study of COVID-19 cases with concomitant CMV infection. A total of 18 cases were diagnosed with CMV infection during the study period May 2020 to December 2020. The median age (Interquartile range) of the study was 45 (53-38) years with predominant male sex (n = 14, 77%). The baseline donor-recipient status for CMV included D+/R+ (10, 55%), D-/R+(6, 33%), and D+/R- (2, 12%). COVID-19 severity in the study included mild (1, 7%), moderate (5, 28%), severe (8, 44%), and critical (4, 22%) cases. Criteria for hyperinflammatory state was met by 77% (n = 14) of cases. The most common therapeutic modality for COVID-19 given was remdesivir (n = 13), tocilizumab (n = 4), and convalescent plasma (n = 4). The median CMV titer at diagnosis was 1200 (1800-1000) copies/mL. The median duration of hospital stay was 12.5 (14-11). Mortality observed in the study was four (22%). The management of CMV co-infection with COVID-19 is associated with high morbidity and mortality, and we suggest screening for CMV infection in all posttransplant COVID-19 cases.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Paired Kidney Exchange in India: Future Potential and Challenges Based on the Experience at a Single Center.
- Author
-
Kute VB, Patel HV, Modi PR, Rizvi SJ, Engineer DP, Banerjee S, Butala BP, Gandhi S, Patel AH, and Mishra VV
- Subjects
- ABO Blood-Group System immunology, Adult, Female, Graft Rejection immunology, Graft Rejection prevention & control, HLA Antigens immunology, Histocompatibility, Humans, India, Isoantibodies blood, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Donor Selection, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Tissue Donors supply & distribution
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare no funding or conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.