55 results on '"Montagud-Marrahi E"'
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2. Pregnancy-Related Complications in Patients With Fibromuscular Dysplasia: A Report From the European/International Fibromuscular Dysplasia Registry
- Author
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Pappaccogli, M, Prejbisz, A, Ciurică, S, Bruno, Rm, Aniszczuk-Hybiak, A, Bracalente, I, De Backer, T, Debiève, F, Delmotte, P, Di Monaco, S, Jarraya, F, Gordin, D, Kosiński, P, Kroon, Aa, Maas, Ahem, Marcon, D, Minuz, P, Montagud-Marrahi, E, Pasquet, A, Poch, E, Rabbia, F, Stergiou, Gs, Tikkanen, I, Toubiana, L, Vinck, W, Warchoł-Celińska, E, Van der Niepen, P, de Leeuw, P, Januszewicz, A, Persu, A, European/International Fibromuscular Dysplasia Registry and Initiative (FEIRI) and the Working Group 'Hypertension and the Kidney' of the ESH: Alexandre Persu, Marco, Pappaccogli, Christophe, Beauloye, Patrick, Chenu, Jean-Philippe, Lengelé, Frank, Hammer, Pierre, Goffette, Parla, Astarci, André, Peeters, Robert, Verhelst, Miikka, Vikkula, Patricia Van der Niepen, Frank Van Tussenbroek, Tine De Backer, Sofie, Gevaert, Philippe, Delmotte, Wouter, Vinck, Daniel, T Gordin, Ilkka, Tikkanen, Maarit, Venermo, George, S Stergiou, Rosa Maria Bruno, Stefano, Taddei, Caterina, Romanini, Ilaria, Petrucci, Franco, Rabbia, Silvia Di Monaco, Pietro, Minuz, Mansueto, Giancarlo, DE MARCHI, Sergio, Denise, Marcon, Bram, Kroon, Peter de Leeuw, Andrzej, Januszewicz, Ewa, Warchol-Celinska, Aleksander, Prejbisz, Adam, Witkowski, Helena, Witowicz, Anna, Aniszczuk-Hybiak, Krzysztof, Pieluszczak, Magdalena, Januszewicz, Piotr, Dobrowolski, Esteban, Poch, Enrique, Montagud-Marrahi, Alicia, Molina, Elena, Guillen, Marta, Burrel, Hanen, Chaker, Faiçal, Jarraya, Anita, Mäkelä, Katarzyna, Józwik-Plebanek, Elżbieta, Florczak, Jacek, Kądziela, Clinical sciences, Clinical Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy, Nephrology, Laboratoire d'Informatique Médicale et Ingénierie des Connaissances en e-Santé (LIMICS), Université Paris 13 (UP13)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Interne Geneeskunde, MUMC+: MA Alg Interne Geneeskunde (9), and RS: Carim - V02 Hypertension and target organ damage
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Gestational hypertension ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Vascular damage Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 16] ,fibromuscular dysplasia ,Comorbidity ,Fibromuscular dysplasia ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Aneurysm rupture ,pregnancy-induced ,Renal Artery ,0302 clinical medicine ,Registries ,CARDIOLOGY ,OUTCOMES ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Obstetrics ,WOMEN ,Middle Aged ,EUROPEAN-SOCIETY ,follow-up studies ,3. Good health ,PREVALENCE ,hypertension, pregnancy-induced ,preeclampsia ,pregnancy ,Lower prevalence ,cardiovascular system ,Premature Birth ,Female ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,hypertension ,Revascularization ,DIAGNOSIS ,CLASSIFICATION ,Preeclampsia ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,ANEURYSM ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,CORONARY-ARTERY DISSECTION ,MANAGEMENT ,Humans ,In patient ,cardiovascular diseases ,Pregnancy ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Pregnancy Complications ,RISK-FACTORS ,[INFO.INFO-BI]Computer Science [cs]/Bioinformatics [q-bio.QM] ,business - Abstract
Current literature suggests a higher risk of pregnancy-related complications in patients with renal fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD). The aim of our study was to assess the nature and prevalence of pregnancy-related complications in patients subsequently diagnosed with FMD. A call for participation was sent to centers contributing to the European/International FMD Registry. Patients with at least 1 pregnancy were included. Data on pregnancy were collected through medical files and FMD characteristics through the European/International FMD Registry. Data from 534 pregnancies were obtained in 237 patients. Despite the fact that, in 96% of cases, FMD was not diagnosed before pregnancy, 40% of women (n=93) experienced pregnancy-related complications, mostly gestational hypertension (25%) and preterm birth (20%), while preeclampsia was reported in only 7.5%. Only 1 patient experienced arterial dissection and another patient an aneurysm rupture. When compared with patients without pregnancy-related complications, patients with complicated pregnancies were younger at FMD diagnosis (43 versus 51 years old; P P =0.003) but underwent more often renal revascularization (63% versus 40%, P
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- 2020
3. Perfusion normothermique ex vivo d’un transplant rénal humain provenant d’un donneur Maastricht 2 pendant 73heures : expérience d’un centre universitaire européen
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Prudhomme, T., Montagud-Marrahi, E., Rabadan Ros, R., Ajami, T., Cuadrado-Payan, E., Estrella, H., Arancibia, A., López De Mesa Rodriguez, B., Sánchez-Etayo, G., Bohils, M., Fundora, Y., Ramírez-Bajo, M.J., Elisenda, B.M., Rovira, J., Larque, A.B., Campistol, J.M., Diekmann, F., Alcaraz, A., and Musquera, M.
- Abstract
De nombreuses équipes travaillent sur la perfusion ex vivo des transplants rénaux et la prolongation de la durée de préservation afin de permettre le transport des transplants rénaux sur de longues distances, d’évaluer leur viabilité et permettre le développement de thérapies innovantes dans la pratique clinique.
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- 2024
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4. The European/international fibromuscular dysplasia registry and initiative (FEIRI) - Clinical phenotypes and their predictors based on a cohort of 1000 patients
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Pappaccogli, M. Di Monaco, S. Warchoł-Celińska, E. Lorthioir, A. Amar, L. Aparicio, L.S. Beauloye, C. Bruno, R.M. Chenu, P. De Leeuw, P. De Backer, T. Delmotte, P. Dika, Z. Gordin, D. Heuten, H. Iwashima, Y. Krzesinski, J.-M. Kroon, A.A. Mazzolai, L. Poch, E. Sarafidis, P. Seinturier, C. Spiering, W. Toubiana, L. Van Der Niepen, P. Van Twist, D. Visonà, A. Wautrecht, J.-C. Witowicz, H. Xu, J. Prejbisz, A. Januszewicz, A. Azizi, M. Persu, A. Hammer, F. Goffette, P. Astarci, P. Peeters, A. Verhelst, R. Vikkula, M. Van Tussenbroek, F. Gevaert, S. Hemelsoet, D. Defreyne, L. Yperzeele, L. Van Der Zijden, T. Lengelé, J.-P. Sprynger, M. Verhamme, P. Vanassche, T. Scoppettuolo, P. Vinck, W. Dobrin, V. Teodora, Y. Wang, J. Jelaković, B. Tikkanen, I. Venermo, M. Mäkelä, A. Plouin, P.-F. Jeunemaitre, X. Chédid, A. Mousseaux, E. Touzé, E. Ormezzano, O. Seinturier, C. Thony, F. Mahfoud, F. Kulenthiran, S. Piperidou, A. Doumas, M. Stergiou, G.S. Vlahakos, D. Canning, C. Sharabi, Y. Morganti, A. Taddei, S. Romanini, C. Petrucci, I. Rabbia, F. Rossi, G.P. Lerco, S. Minuz, P. Mansueto, G. De Marchi, S. Marcon, D. Salice, P. Bigolin, P. Zingaretti, V. Cianci, R. Zedde, M. Matteucci, M.C. Kawarada, O. Kadoya, Y. Van Twist, D.J. Kroon, B. Van Den Born, B.-J. Høieggen, A. Sommer, M.S. Witkowski, A. Kądziela, J. Soplińska, A. Pieluszczak, K. Józwik-Plebanek, K. Januszewicz, M. Florczak, E. Dobrowolski, P. Szabóová, E. Hudák, M. Moščovič, M. Mediavilla, J.D. Aguila, F.J. Oliveras, A. Segura, J. Prado, J.C. Robles, N.R. Montagud-Marrahi, E. Molina, A. Guillen, E. Burrel, M. De La Llama, P.F. Miguel-Amigo, L.S. Barros-Membrilla, A.J. Gottsäter, A. Wuerzner, G. Buso, G. Jarraya, F. Chaker, H. Adlam, D. Chrysochou, C. Dhaun, N. Hunter, R.W. MacIntyre, I. Webb, D. European/International FMD Registry Initiative (FEIRI) Working Group 'Hypertension the Kidney' of the European Society of Hypertension (ESH) and Pappaccogli, M. Di Monaco, S. Warchoł-Celińska, E. Lorthioir, A. Amar, L. Aparicio, L.S. Beauloye, C. Bruno, R.M. Chenu, P. De Leeuw, P. De Backer, T. Delmotte, P. Dika, Z. Gordin, D. Heuten, H. Iwashima, Y. Krzesinski, J.-M. Kroon, A.A. Mazzolai, L. Poch, E. Sarafidis, P. Seinturier, C. Spiering, W. Toubiana, L. Van Der Niepen, P. Van Twist, D. Visonà, A. Wautrecht, J.-C. Witowicz, H. Xu, J. Prejbisz, A. Januszewicz, A. Azizi, M. Persu, A. Hammer, F. Goffette, P. Astarci, P. Peeters, A. Verhelst, R. Vikkula, M. Van Tussenbroek, F. Gevaert, S. Hemelsoet, D. Defreyne, L. Yperzeele, L. Van Der Zijden, T. Lengelé, J.-P. Sprynger, M. Verhamme, P. Vanassche, T. Scoppettuolo, P. Vinck, W. Dobrin, V. Teodora, Y. Wang, J. Jelaković, B. Tikkanen, I. Venermo, M. Mäkelä, A. Plouin, P.-F. Jeunemaitre, X. Chédid, A. Mousseaux, E. Touzé, E. Ormezzano, O. Seinturier, C. Thony, F. Mahfoud, F. Kulenthiran, S. Piperidou, A. Doumas, M. Stergiou, G.S. Vlahakos, D. Canning, C. Sharabi, Y. Morganti, A. Taddei, S. Romanini, C. Petrucci, I. Rabbia, F. Rossi, G.P. Lerco, S. Minuz, P. Mansueto, G. De Marchi, S. Marcon, D. Salice, P. Bigolin, P. Zingaretti, V. Cianci, R. Zedde, M. Matteucci, M.C. Kawarada, O. Kadoya, Y. Van Twist, D.J. Kroon, B. Van Den Born, B.-J. Høieggen, A. Sommer, M.S. Witkowski, A. Kądziela, J. Soplińska, A. Pieluszczak, K. Józwik-Plebanek, K. Januszewicz, M. Florczak, E. Dobrowolski, P. Szabóová, E. Hudák, M. Moščovič, M. Mediavilla, J.D. Aguila, F.J. Oliveras, A. Segura, J. Prado, J.C. Robles, N.R. Montagud-Marrahi, E. Molina, A. Guillen, E. Burrel, M. De La Llama, P.F. Miguel-Amigo, L.S. Barros-Membrilla, A.J. Gottsäter, A. Wuerzner, G. Buso, G. Jarraya, F. Chaker, H. Adlam, D. Chrysochou, C. Dhaun, N. Hunter, R.W. MacIntyre, I. Webb, D. European/International FMD Registry Initiative (FEIRI) Working Group 'Hypertension the Kidney' of the European Society of Hypertension (ESH)
- Abstract
Aims: Since December 2015, the European/International Fibromuscular Dysplasia (FMD) Registry enrolled 1022 patients from 22 countries. We present their characteristics according to disease subtype, age and gender, as well as predictors of widespread disease, aneurysms and dissections. Methods and results: All patients diagnosed with FMD (string-of-beads or focal stenosis in at least one vascular bed) based on computed tomography angiography, magnetic resonance angiography, and/or catheter-based angiography were eligible. Patients were predominantly women (82%) and Caucasians (88%). Age at diagnosis was 46 ± 16 years (12% ≥65 years old), 86% were hypertensive, 72% had multifocal, and 57% multivessel FMD. Compared to patients with multifocal FMD, patients with focal FMD were younger, more often men, had less often multivessel FMD but more revascularizations. Compared to women with FMD, men were younger, had more often focal FMD and arterial dissections. Compared to younger patients with FMD, patients ≥65 years old had more often multifocal FMD, lower estimated glomerular filtration rate and more atherosclerotic lesions. Independent predictors of multivessel FMD were age at FMD diagnosis, stroke, multifocal subtype, presence of aneurysm or dissection, and family history of FMD. Predictors of aneurysms were multivessel and multifocal FMD. Predictors of dissections were age at FMD diagnosis, male gender, stroke, and multivessel FMD. Conclusions: The European/International FMD Registry allowed large-scale characterization of distinct profiles of patients with FMD and, more importantly, identification of a unique set of independent predictors of widespread disease, aneurysms and dissections, paving the way for targeted screening, management, and follow-up of FMD. © 2020 Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2021
5. Pregnancy-related complications in patients with fibromuscular dysplasia: A report from the european/international fibromuscular dysplasia registry
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Pappaccogli, M. Prejbisz, A. Ciuricǎ, S. Bruno, R.M. Aniszczuk-Hybiak, A. Bracalente, I. De Backer, T. Debiève, F. Delmotte, P. Di Monaco, S. Jarraya, F. Gordin, D. Kosiński, P. Kroon, A.A. Maas, A.H.E.M. Marcon, D. Minuz, P. Montagud-Marrahi, E. Pasquet, A. Poch, E. Rabbia, F. Stergiou, G.S. Tikkanen, I. Toubiana, L. Vinck, W. Warchoł-Celińska, E. Van Der Niepen, P. De Leeuw, P. Januszewicz, A. Persu, A.
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cardiovascular system ,cardiovascular diseases - Abstract
Current literature suggests a higher risk of pregnancy-related complications in patients with renal fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD). The aim of our study was to assess the nature and prevalence of pregnancy-related complications in patients subsequently diagnosed with FMD. A call for participation was sent to centers contributing to the European/International FMD Registry. Patients with at least 1 pregnancy were included. Data on pregnancy were collected through medical files and FMD characteristics through the European/International FMD Registry. Data from 534 pregnancies were obtained in 237 patients. Despite the fact that, in 96% of cases, FMD was not diagnosed before pregnancy, 40% of women (n=93) experienced pregnancy-related complications, mostly gestational hypertension (25%) and preterm birth (20%), while preeclampsia was reported in only 7.5%. Only 1 patient experienced arterial dissection and another patient an aneurysm rupture. When compared with patients without pregnancy-related complications, patients with complicated pregnancies were younger at FMD diagnosis (43 versus 51 years old; P
- Published
- 2020
6. Pregnancy-Related Complications in Patients With Fibromuscular Dysplasia: A Report From the European/International Fibromuscular Dysplasia Registry
- Author
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Pappaccogli, M., Prejbisz, A., Ciurică, S., Bruno, R.M., Aniszczuk-Hybiak, A., Bracalente, I., Backer, T. De, Debiève, F., Delmotte, P., Monaco, S., Jarraya, F., Gordin, D., Kosiński, P., Kroon, A.A., Maas, A.H.E.M., Marcon, D., Minuz, P., Montagud-Marrahi, E., Pasquet, A., Poch, E., Rabbia, F., Stergiou, G.S., Tikkanen, I., Toubiana, L., Vinck, W., Warchoł-Celińska, E., Niepen, P. Van der, Leeuw, P. de, Januszewicz, A., Persu, A., Pappaccogli, M., Prejbisz, A., Ciurică, S., Bruno, R.M., Aniszczuk-Hybiak, A., Bracalente, I., Backer, T. De, Debiève, F., Delmotte, P., Monaco, S., Jarraya, F., Gordin, D., Kosiński, P., Kroon, A.A., Maas, A.H.E.M., Marcon, D., Minuz, P., Montagud-Marrahi, E., Pasquet, A., Poch, E., Rabbia, F., Stergiou, G.S., Tikkanen, I., Toubiana, L., Vinck, W., Warchoł-Celińska, E., Niepen, P. Van der, Leeuw, P. de, Januszewicz, A., and Persu, A.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 225490.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access), Current literature suggests a higher risk of pregnancy-related complications in patients with renal fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD). The aim of our study was to assess the nature and prevalence of pregnancy-related complications in patients subsequently diagnosed with FMD. A call for participation was sent to centers contributing to the European/International FMD Registry. Patients with at least 1 pregnancy were included. Data on pregnancy were collected through medical files and FMD characteristics through the European/International FMD Registry. Data from 534 pregnancies were obtained in 237 patients. Despite the fact that, in 96% of cases, FMD was not diagnosed before pregnancy, 40% of women (n=93) experienced pregnancy-related complications, mostly gestational hypertension (25%) and preterm birth (20%), while preeclampsia was reported in only 7.5%. Only 1 patient experienced arterial dissection and another patient an aneurysm rupture. When compared with patients without pregnancy-related complications, patients with complicated pregnancies were younger at FMD diagnosis (43 versus 51 years old; P<0.001) and had a lower prevalence of cerebrovascular FMD (30% versus 52%; P=0.003) but underwent more often renal revascularization (63% versus 40%, P<0.001). In conclusion, the prevalence of pregnancy-related complications such as gestational hypertension and preterm birth was high in patients with FMD, probably related to the severity of renal FMD. However, the prevalence of preeclampsia and arterial complications was low/moderate. These findings emphasize the need to screen hypertensive women for FMD to ensure revascularization before pregnancy if indicated and appropriate follow-up during pregnancy, without discouraging patients with FMD from considering pregnancy.
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- 2020
7. Antibody-mediated rejection diagnosed in early protocol biopsies in high immunological risk kidney transplant recipients.
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Arana C, Hermida E, Rovira J, Caro JL, Cucchiari D, Larque AB, Palou E, Torres J, Montagud-Marrahi E, Cuadrado-Páyan E, Rodriguez D, Cacho J, Gonzalez A, Reinoso J, Nicolau C, Esforzado N, Torregrosa V, Piñeiro G, Revuelta I, Cofan F, Diekmann F, Ventura-Aguiar P, and Oppenheimer F
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Biopsy, Follow-Up Studies, Adult, Risk Factors, Retrospective Studies, Prognosis, HLA Antigens immunology, Transplant Recipients, Kidney Failure, Chronic surgery, Kidney Failure, Chronic immunology, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Graft Rejection immunology, Graft Rejection diagnosis, Graft Rejection etiology, Graft Survival immunology, Isoantibodies immunology
- Abstract
Background: Renal transplant recipients with donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies are at an increased risk of antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR). Early protocolized renal biopsies may serve as a strategy to improve diagnosis in this patient population., Methods: We evaluated 155 highly sensitized renal transplant recipients with cPRA class I + II >90% pre-transplant from 2015 to 2022. Patients with protocol biopsies within the first 2 weeks post-transplant were included., Results: A total of 122 patients were included in the study. Of these, 13 (10.6%) were diagnosed with very early antibody-mediated rejection (veABMR) within the first 2 weeks post-transplant. This corresponds to 52% (13/25 patients) of all ABMR cases reported during the follow-up of this population. The graft survival rates at 1 and 3 years were significantly lower in patients with veABMR (P < .001) compared with patients without rejection in the early protocol biopsy. In terms of severity, the veABMR cohort exhibited a hazard ratio (HR) of 10.33 (95% confidence interval 3.23-33.06, P < .001) for graft failure. The presence of donor-specific antibodies class II on the day of transplantation and a higher percentage of eplet mismatch (EpMM), particularly EpMM DQA1, correlated with the development of veABMR., Conclusion: Early protocol biopsies play a pivotal role in the early detection of veABMR in high-risk immunological patients. Patients with veABMR face significant risks of graft loss, despite early treatment of rejection., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the ERA.)
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- 2025
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8. Corrigendum: Ex vivo normothermic preservation of a kidney graft from uncontrolled donation after circulatory death over 73 hours.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Luque Y, Ros RR, Ajami T, Cuadrado-Payan E, Estrella H, Arancibia A, Sánchez-Etayo G, Bohils M, Marrero R, Fundora Y, Ramírez-Bajo MJ, Banon-Maneus E, Rovira J, Larque AB, Campistol JM, Diekmann F, and Musquera M
- Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2023.1330043.]., (Copyright © 2024 Montagud-Marrahi, Luque, Ros, Ajami, Cuadrado-Payan, Estrella, Arancibia, Sánchez-Etayo, Bohils, Marrero, Fundora, Ramírez-Bajo, Banon-Maneus, Rovira, Larque, Campistol, Diekmann and Musquera.)
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- 2024
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9. Ex vivo normothermic preservation of a kidney graft from uncontrolled donation after circulatory death over 73 hours.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Luque Y, Ros RR, Ajami T, Cuadrado-Payan E, Estrella H, Arancibia A, Sánchez-Etayo G, Bohils M, Marrero R, Fundora Y, Ramírez-Bajo MJ, Banon-Maneus E, Rovira J, Larque AB, Campistol JM, Diekmann F, and Musquera M
- Abstract
The transplant community is focused on prolonging the ex vivo preservation time of kidney grafts to allow for long-distance kidney graft transportation, assess the viability of marginal grafts, and optimize a platform for the translation of innovative therapeutics to clinical practice, especially those focused on cell and vector delivery to organ conditioning and reprogramming. We describe the first case of feasible preservation of a kidney from a donor after uncontrolled circulatory death over a 73-h period using normothermic perfusion and analyze hemodynamic, biochemical, histological, and transcriptomic parameters for inflammation and kidney injury. The mean pressure and flow values were 71.24 ± 9.62 mmHg and 99.65 ± 18.54 mL/min, respectively. The temperature range was 36.7°C-37.2°C. The renal resistance index was 0.75 ± 0.15 mmHg/mL/min. The mean pH was 7.29 ± 0.15. The lactate concentration peak increased until 213 mg/dL at 6 h, reaching normal values after 34 h of perfusion (8.92 mg/dL). The total urine output at the end of perfusion was 1.185 mL. Histological analysis revealed no significant increase in acute tubular necrosis (ATN) severity as perfusion progressed. The expression of KIM-1, VEGF, and TGFβ decreased after 6-18 h of perfusion until 60 h in which the expression of these genes increased again together with the expression of β -catenin, Ki67, and TIMP1. We show that normothermic perfusion can maintain a kidney graft viable ex vivo for 3 days, thus allowing a rapid translation of pre-clinical therapeutics to clinical practice., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Montagud-Marrahi, Luque, Ros, Ajami, Cuadrado-Payan, Estrella, Arancibia, Sánchez-Etayo, Bohils, Marrero, Fundora, Ramírez-Bajo, Banon-Maneus, Rovira, Larque, Campistol, Diekmann and Musquera.)
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- 2024
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10. Midnight Cortisol is Associated with Changes in Systolic Blood Pressure and Diabetic Neuropathy in Subjects with Type 1 Diabetes Undergoing Simultaneous Kidney-Pancreas Transplantation.
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Boswell L, Amor AJ, Montagud-Marrahi E, Casals G, Díaz-Catalan D, Banon-Maneus E, Ramírez-Bajo MJ, Hierro N, Diekmann F, Musquera M, Serés-Noriega T, Esmatjes E, Ferrer-Fàbrega J, Ventura-Aguiar P, and Hanzu FA
- Abstract
Introduction: An increased midnight cortisol (MC) has been described in end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) and type 1 diabetes (T1D). Lower circulating levels of the cytokine soluble tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-like weak inducer of apoptosis (sTWEAK) have been found in T1D and ESKD and associated with cardiovascular (CV) events in the latter. We aimed to study MC and sTWEAK in simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplant (SPKT) recipients, and the association of these markers with CV risk factors and transplant outcomes., Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study including subjects with T1D who received a first SPKT between 2008 and 2020. MC and sTWEAK at baseline were correlated with CV risk factors and evolution 1 year after SPKT., Results: We included 29 subjects (58.6% women, mean age 43.5 ± 7.5 years, diabetes duration 31.9 ± 9.4 years). Systolic blood pressure (SBP) increased directly with MC quartiles, despite similar hypertension prevalence (p < 0.05). At 1 year, antihypertensive treatment was deintensified in those in lower MC quartiles (p < 0.05). Diabetic neuropathy prevalence decreased progressively in higher cortisol quartiles (p for trend = 0.005). Low MC was associated with delayed kidney graft function (p for trend = 0.044), and high sTWEAK with kidney graft rejection (p for trend = 0.018). In multivariate analyses, MC (standardized-β 0.505, p = 0.004) and age (standardized-β - 0.460, p = 0.040) were independently correlated with SBP, and MC was independently associated with the presence of diabetic neuropathy (OR 0.633, 95% CI 0.425-0.944, p = 0.025), adjusted for confounders., Conclusions: In this exploratory study, lower MC was associated with a lower baseline SBP, an improvement of antihypertensive treatment 1 year after transplant, and a higher diabetic neuropathy prevalence in SPKT recipients., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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11. Early kinetics of donor-derived cell-free DNA after transplantation predicts renal graft recovery and long-term function.
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Cucchiari D, Cuadrado-Payan E, Gonzalez-Roca E, Revuelta I, Argudo M, Ramirez-Bajo MJ, Ventura-Aguiar P, Rovira J, Bañon-Maneus E, Montagud-Marrahi E, Rodriguez-Espinosa D, Cacho J, Arana C, Torregrosa V, Esforzado N, Cofàn F, Oppenheimer F, Musquera M, Peri L, Casas S, Dholakia S, Palou E, Campistol JM, Bayés B, Puig JA, and Diekmann F
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- Humans, Delayed Graft Function, Renal Dialysis, Tissue Donors, Graft Survival, Graft Rejection diagnosis, Risk Factors, Cell-Free Nucleic Acids, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) upon transplantation is one of the most impactful events that the kidney graft suffers during its life. Its clinical manifestation in the recipient, delayed graft function (DGF), has serious prognostic consequences. However, the different definitions of DGF are subject to physicians' choices and centers' policies, and a more objective tool to quantify IRI is needed. Here, we propose the use of donor-derived cell-free DNA (ddcfDNA) for this scope., Methods: ddcfDNA was assessed in 61 kidney transplant recipients of either living or deceased donors at 24 h, and 7, 14 and 30 days after transplantation using the AlloSeq cfDNA Kit (CareDx, San Francisco, CA, USA). Patients were followed-up for 6 months and 7-year graft survival was estimated through the complete and functional iBox tool., Results: Twenty-four-hour ddcfDNA was associated with functional DGF [7.20% (2.35%-15.50%) in patients with functional DGF versus 2.70% (1.55%-4.05%) in patients without it, P = .023] and 6-month estimated glomerular filtration rate (r = -0.311, P = .023). At Day 7 after transplantation, ddcfDNA was associated with dialysis duration in DGF patients (r = 0.612, P = .005) and worse 7-year iBox-estimated graft survival probability (β -0.42, P = .001) at multivariable analysis. Patients with early normalization of ddcfDNA (<0.5% at 1 week) had improved functional iBox-estimated probability of graft survival (79.5 ± 16.8%) in comparison with patients with 7-day ddcfDNA ≥0.5% (67.7 ± 24.1%) (P = .047)., Conclusions: ddcfDNA early kinetics after transplantation reflect recovery from IRI and are associated with short-, medium- and long-term graft outcome. This may provide a more objective estimate of IRI severity in comparison with the clinical-based definitions of DGF., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the ERA. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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12. Bariatric Surgery Outcomes in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease.
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Pané A, Claro M, Molina-Andujar A, Olbeyra R, Romano-Andrioni B, Boswell L, Montagud-Marrahi E, Jiménez A, Ibarzabal A, Viaplana J, Ventura-Aguiar P, Amor AJ, Vidal J, Flores L, and de Hollanda A
- Abstract
Obesity increases the risk of developing chronic kidney disease (CKD), which has a major negative impact on global health. Bariatric surgery (BS) has demonstrated a substantial improvement of obesity-related comorbidities and thus, it has emerged as a potential therapeutic tool in order to prevent end-stage renal disease. A limited number of publications to date have examined the beneficial effects and risks of BS in patients with non-advanced stages of CKD. We aimed to investigate the safety of BS in patients with CKD stages 3-4 (directly related or not to obesity) and both the metabolic/renal outcomes post-BS. A total of 57 individuals were included (n = 19 for CKD-group; n = 38 for patients with obesity, but normal eGFR [control-group]). Weight loss and obesity comorbidities resolution after BS were similar in both groups. Renal function (eGFR [CKD-EPI]) improved significantly at the 1-year follow-up: Δ10.2 (5.2-14.9) ( p < 0.001) for CKD-group and Δ4.0 (-3.9-9.0) mL/min/1.73 m
2 ( p = 0.043) for controls. Although this improvement tended to decrease in the 5-year follow-up, eGFR remained above its basal value for the CKD-group. Noteworthy, eGFR also improved in those patients who presented CKD not directly attributed to obesity. For patients with CKD, BS appears to be safe and effective regarding weight loss and obesity comorbidities resolution, irrespective of the main cause of CKD (related or not to obesity).- Published
- 2023
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13. Diabetic Neuropathy Is Independently Associated With Worse Graft Outcomes and Incident Cardiovascular Disease After Pancreas Transplantation: A Retrospective Cohort Study in Type 1 Diabetes.
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Boswell L, Ventura-Aguiar P, Alejaldre A, Navarro-Otano J, Cofan F, Serés-Noriega T, Pané A, Montagud-Marrahi E, Molina-Andújar A, Ruiz M, Cucchiari D, Musquera M, Ferrer-Fàbrega J, Diekmann F, Esmatjes E, and Amor AJ
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- Male, Humans, Adult, Middle Aged, Female, Cohort Studies, Retrospective Studies, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 complications, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 diagnosis, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 surgery, Diabetic Neuropathies diagnosis, Diabetic Neuropathies epidemiology, Diabetic Neuropathies etiology, Pancreas Transplantation adverse effects, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Cardiovascular Diseases complications
- Abstract
Background: Information about the impact of diabetic neuropathy (DN) on outcomes after pancreas transplantation (PT) is scarce. We assessed the independent relationship between DN markers with both graft survival and incident cardiovascular disease (CVD) after transplantation., Methods: A cohort study in individuals with type 1 diabetes and end-stage kidney disease who underwent PT between 1999 and 2015 was conducted. DN was assessed with vibration perception thresholds (VPTs) and orthostatic hypotension (pre-PT and 6 mo, 2-3, 5-6, and 8-10 y after transplantation). Pretransplantation and posttransplantation DN markers were related with graft failure/dysfunction and incident CVD during follow-up., Results: We included 187 participants (70% men, age 39.9 ± 7.1 y, diabetes duration 27.1 y), with a median follow-up of 11.3 y. Abnormal VPTs (≥25 V) were observed in 53%. After transplantation, VPTs improved (22.4 ± 8.4 pretransplant versus 16.1 ± 6.1 V at 8-10 y post-PT; P < 0.001); additionally, the prevalence of abnormal VPTs decreased (53% pretransplant versus 24.4% at 8-10 y; P < 0.001). After adjusting for age, sex, diabetes duration, blood pressure, body mass index, and previous CVD, pretransplant VPTs ≥25 V were independently associated with pancreas graft failure/dysfunction (hazard ratio [HR], 2.01 [1.01-4.00]) and incident CVD (HR, 2.57 [1.17-5.64]). Furthermore, persistent abnormal VPTs after 6 mo posttransplantation were associated with the worst outcomes (HR, 2.80 [1.25-6.23] and HR, 3.19 [1.14-8.96], for graft failure/dysfunction and incident CVD, respectively)., Conclusions: In individuals with type 1 diabetes and end-stage kidney disease, PT was associated with an improvement of VPTs. This simple and widely available DN study was independently associated with pancreas graft function and CVD posttransplantation., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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14. Extracorporeal Photopheresis Improves Graft Survival in a Full-Mismatch Rat Model of Kidney Transplantation.
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Piñeiro GJ, Lazo-Rodriguez M, Ventura-Aguiar P, Ramirez-Bajo MJ, Banon-Maneus E, Lozano M, Cid J, Hierro-Garcia N, Cucchiari D, Revuelta I, Montagud-Marrahi E, Palou E, Bayés-Genís B, Campistol JM, Diekmann F, and Rovira J
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- Rats, Animals, Graft Survival, Rats, Inbred Lew, Graft Rejection prevention & control, Antibodies, Kidney Transplantation, Photopheresis
- Abstract
Extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP) is an immunomodulatory therapy based on the infusion of autologous cellular products exposed to ultraviolet light (UV) in the presence of a photosensitizer. The study evaluates the ECP efficacy as induction therapy in a full-mismatch kidney transplant rat model. Dark Agouti to Lewis (DA-L) kidney transplant model has been established. ECP product was obtained from Lewis rat recipients after DA kidney graft transplantation (Lew
DA ). Leukocytes of those LewDA rats were exposed to 8-methoxy psoralen, and illuminated with UV-A. The ECP doses assessed were 10 × 106 and 100 × 106 cells/time point. Lewis recipients received seven ECP infusions. DA-L model was characterized by the appearance of donor-specific antibodies (DSA) and kidney function deterioration from day three after kidney transplant. The dysfunction progressed rapidly until graft loss (6.1 ± 0.5 days). Tacrolimus at 0.25 mg/kg prolonged rat survival until 11.4 ± 0.7 days ( p = 0.0004). In this context, the application of leukocytes from LewDA sensitized rats accelerated the rejection (8.7 ± 0.45, p = 0.0012), whereas ECP product at high dose extended kidney graft survival until 26.3 ± 7.3 days, reducing class I and II DSA in surviving rats. ECP treatment increases kidney graft survival in full-mismatch rat model of acute rejection and is a suitable immunomodulatory therapy to be explored in kidney transplantation., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Piñeiro, Lazo-Rodriguez, Ventura-Aguiar, Ramirez-Bajo, Banon-Maneus, Lozano, Cid, Hierro-Garcia, Cucchiari, Revuelta, Montagud-Marrahi, Palou, Bayés-Genís, Campistol, Diekmann and Rovira.)- Published
- 2023
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15. Immune Profiling of Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells at Pancreas Acute Rejection Episodes in Kidney-Pancreas Transplant Recipients.
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Rovira J, Ramirez-Bajo MJ, Bañón-Maneus E, Hierro-Garcia N, Lazo-Rodriguez M, Piñeiro GJ, Montagud-Marrahi E, Cucchiari D, Revuelta I, Cuatrecasas M, Campistol JM, Ricart MJ, Diekmann F, Garcia-Criado A, and Ventura-Aguiar P
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Pancreas, Kidney, Leukocytes, Mononuclear, Pancreas Transplantation
- Abstract
Profiling of circulating immune cells provides valuable insight to the pathophysiology of acute rejection in organ transplantation. Herein we characterized the peripheral blood mononuclear cells in simultaneous kidney-pancreas transplant recipients. We conducted a retrospective analysis in a biopsy-matched cohort ( n = 67) and compared patients with biopsy proven acute rejection (BPAR; 41%) to those without rejection (No-AR). We observed that CD3+ T cells, both CD8+ and CD4+, as well as CD19+ B cells were increased in patients with BPAR, particularly in biopsies performed in the early post-transplant period (<3 months). During this period immune subsets presented a good discriminative ability (CD4+ AUC 0.79; CD8+ AUC 0.80; B cells AUC 0.86; p < 0.05) and outperformed lipase (AUC 0.62; p = 0.12) for the diagnosis of acute rejection. We further evaluated whether this could be explained by differences in frequencies prior to transplantation. Patients presenting with early post-transplant rejection (<3 months) had a significant increase in T-cell frequencies pre-transplant, both CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells ( p < 0.01), which were associated with a significant inferior rejection-free graft survival. T cell frequencies in peripheral blood correlated with pancreas acute rejection episodes, and variations prior to transplantation were associated with pancreas early acute rejection., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Rovira, Ramirez-Bajo, Bañón-Maneus, Hierro-Garcia, Lazo-Rodriguez, Piñeiro, Montagud-Marrahi, Cucchiari, Revuelta, Cuatrecasas, Campistol, Ricart, Diekmann, Garcia-Criado and Ventura-Aguiar.)
- Published
- 2022
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16. Outcomes in older kidney recipients from older donors: A propensity score analysis.
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Cuadrado-Payán E, Montagud-Marrahi E, Casals-Urquiza J, Del Risco-Zevallos J, Rodríguez-Espinosa D, Cacho J, Arana C, Cucchiari D, Ventura-Aguiar P, Revuelta I, Piñeiro GJ, Esforzado N, Cofan F, Bañon-Maneus E, Campistol JM, Oppenheimer F, Torregrosa JV, and Diekmann F
- Abstract
Background: The age of patients referred for kidney transplantation has increased progressively. However, the precise influence of age on transplant outcomes is controversial., Methods: Etrospective study in which graft and recipient survival were assessed in a cohort of ≥75 years old kidney recipients and compared with a contemporary younger one aged 60-65 years through a propensity score analysis., Results: We included 106 recipients between 60-65 and 57 patients of ≥75 years old with a median follow-up of 31 [13-54] months. Unadjusted one- and five-year recipient survival did not significantly differ between the older (91% and 74%) and the younger group (95% and 82%, P=0.06). In the IPTW weighted Cox regression analysis, recipient age was not associated with an increased risk of death (HR 1.88 95%CI [0.81-4.37], P=0.14). Unadjusted one- and five-year death-censored graft survival did not significantly differ between both groups (96% and 83% for the older and 99% and 89% for the younger group, respectively, P=0.08). After IPTW weighted Cox Regression analysis, recipient age ≥75 years was no associated with an increased risk of graft loss (HR 1.95, 95%CI [0.65-5.82], P=0.23)., Conclusions: These results suggest that recipient age should not be considered itself as an absolute contraindication for kidney transplant., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Cuadrado-Payán, Montagud-Marrahi, Casals-Urquiza, del Risco-Zevallos, Rodríguez-Espinosa, Cacho, Arana, Cucchiari, Ventura-Aguiar, Revuelta, Piñeiro, Esforzado, Cofan, Bañon-Maneus, Campistol, Oppenheimer, Torregrosa and Diekmann.)
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- 2022
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17. Bariatric Surgery Outcomes in Patients with Kidney Transplantation.
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Pané A, Molina-Andujar A, Olbeyra R, Romano-Andrioni B, Boswell L, Montagud-Marrahi E, Jiménez A, Ibarzabal A, Viaplana J, Ventura-Aguiar P, Amor AJ, Vidal J, Flores L, and de Hollanda A
- Abstract
Obesity and kidney transplantation (KTx) are closely related. Obesity increases the risk of chronic kidney disease and can be a relative contraindication for KTx. Besides, KTx recipients are predisposed to obesity and its comorbidities. Consequently, bariatric surgery (BS) emerges as a powerful therapeutic tool either before or after KTx. Since evidence regarding the best approach is still scarce, we aimed to describe renal and metabolic outcomes in a single centre with more than 15-year experience in both surgeries., Methods: A retrospective study including patients who had received a KTx either before or after BS. Usual metabolic and renal outcomes, but also new variables (as renal graft dysfunction) were collected for a minimum follow-up of 1-year post-BS., Results: A total of 11 patients were included: n = 6 (BS-post-KTx) and n = 5 (BS-pre-KTx). One patient was assessed in both groups. No differences in the main outcomes were identified, but BS-post-KTx group tended to gain more weight during the follow-up. The incidence of renal graft dysfunction was comparable (4/6 for BS-post-KTx, 3/5 for BS-pre-KTx) between groups., Conclusions: BS in patients with KTx appears to be safe and effective attending to metabolic and renal outcomes. These results seem irrespective of the time course, except for weight regain, which appears to be a common pattern in the BS-post-KTx group.
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- 2022
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18. Humoral and Cellular Immune Responses After a 3-dose Course of mRNA-1273 COVID-19 Vaccine in Kidney Transplant Recipients: A Prospective Cohort Study.
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Cucchiari D, Egri N, Rodriguez-Espinosa D, Montagud-Marrahi E, Casals-Urquiza J, Del Risco-Zevallos J, Bodro M, Ventura-Aguiar P, Cofan F, Cacho J, Molina-Andujar A, Rovira J, Banon-Maneus E, José Ramirez-Bajo M, Pérez-Olmos A, Garcia-Pascual M, Pascal M, Vilella A, Trilla A, Palou E, Revuelta I, Juan M, Campistol JM, Oppenheimer F, Moreno A, Miró JM, Bayés B, and Diekmann F
- Abstract
In kidney transplant recipients, there is discordance between the development of cellular and humoral response after vaccination against SARS-CoV-2. We sought to determine the interplay between the 2 arms of adaptive immunity in a 3-dose course of mRNA-1273 100 μg vaccine., Methods: Humoral (IgG/IgM) and cellular (N- and S-ELISpot) responses were studied in 117 kidney and 12 kidney-pancreas transplant recipients at the following time points: before the first dose, 14 d after the second dose' and before and after the third dose, with a median of 203 and 232 d after the start of the vaccination cycle, respectively., Results: After the second dose, 26.7% of naive cases experienced seroconversion. Before the third dose and in the absence of COVID-19, this percentage increased to 61.9%. After the third dose, seroconversion occurred in 80.0% of patients. Naive patients who had at any time point a detectable positivity for S-ELISpot were 75.2% of the population, whereas patients who maintained S-ELISpot positivity throughout the study were 34.3%. S-ELISpot positivity at 42 d was associated with final seroconversion (odds ratio' 3.14; 95% confidence interval' 1.10-8.96; P = 0.032). Final IgG titer was significantly higher in patients with constant S-ELISpot positivity ( P < 0.001)., Conclusions: A substantial proportion of kidney transplant recipients developed late seroconversion after 2 doses. Cellular immunity was associated with the development of a stronger humoral response., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Transplantation Direct. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
- Published
- 2022
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19. Use of remdesivir in kidney transplant recipients with SARS-CoV-2 Omicron infection.
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Cacho J, Nicolás D, Bodro M, Cuadrado-Payán E, Torres-Jaramillo V, Gonzalez-Rojas Á, Ventura-Aguiar P, Montagud-Marrahi E, Herrera S, Rico V, Cofàn F, Oppenheimer F, Revuelta I, Diekmann F, and Cucchiari D
- Subjects
- Adenosine Monophosphate analogs & derivatives, Alanine analogs & derivatives, Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Transplant Recipients, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, COVID-19 Drug Treatment
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- 2022
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20. Preemptive simultaneous pancreas kidney transplantation has survival benefit to patients.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Cuadrado-Payán E, Hermida E, Cacho J, Cucchiari D, Revuelta I, Del Risco-Zevallos J, Esforzado N, Cofan F, Oppenheimer F, Torregrosa V, Ferrer J, Amor AJ, Esmatjes E, Ramírez-Bajo MJ, Musquera M, Cooper M, Bayes B, Campistol JM, Diekmann F, and Ventura-Aguiar P
- Subjects
- Graft Survival, Humans, Pancreas, Retrospective Studies, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 surgery, Kidney Transplantation methods, Pancreas Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Several organ allocation protocols give priority to wait-listed simultaneous kidney-pancreas (SPK) transplant recipients to mitigate the higher cardiovascular risk of patients with diabetes mellitus on dialysis. The available information regarding the impact of preemptive simultaneous kidney-pancreas transplantation on recipient and graft outcomes is nonetheless controversial. To help resolve this, we explored the influence of preemptive simultaneous kidney-pancreas transplants on patient and graft survival through a retrospective analysis of the OPTN/UNOS database, encompassing 9690 simultaneous transplant recipients between 2000 and 2017. Statistical analysis was performed applying a propensity score analysis to minimize bias. Of these patients, 1796 (19%) were transplanted preemptively. At ten years, recipient survival was significantly superior in the preemptive group when compared to the non-preemptive group (78.9% vs 71.8%). Dialysis at simultaneous kidney-pancreas transplantation was an independent significant risk for patient survival (hazard ratio 1.66 [95% confidence interval 1.32-2.09]), especially if the dialysis duration was 12 months or longer. Preemptive transplantation was also associated with significant superior kidney graft survival compared to those on dialysis (death-censored: 84.3% vs 75.4%, respectively; estimated half-life of 38.57 [38.33 -38.81] vs 22.35 [22.17 - 22.53] years, respectively). No differences were observed between both groups neither for pancreas graft survival nor for post-transplant surgical complications. Thus, our results sustain the relevance of early referral for pancreas transplantation and the importance of pancreas allocation priority in reducing patient mortality after simultaneous kidney-pancreas transplantation., (Copyright © 2022 International Society of Nephrology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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21. Donor-derived Cell-free DNA Shows High Sensitivity for the Diagnosis of Pancreas Graft Rejection in Simultaneous Pancreas-kidney Transplantation.
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Ventura-Aguiar P, Ramirez-Bajo MJ, Rovira J, Bañón-Maneus E, Hierro N, Lazo M, Cuatrecasas M, Garcia-Criado MA, Liang N, Swenerton RK, Cofan F, Cucchiari D, Esforzado N, Montagud-Marrahi E, Oppenheimer F, Piñeiro G, Revuelta I, Torregrosa V, Ahmed E, Soboleva K, Kaur N, Zimmermann BG, Al Haj Baddar N, Demko ZP, Escrig C, Tabriziani H, Gauthier P, Billings PR, Amor AJ, Ferrer J, Campistol JM, and Diekmann F
- Subjects
- Biomarkers, Humans, Pilot Projects, Postoperative Complications, Tissue Donors, Cell-Free Nucleic Acids genetics, Graft Rejection diagnosis, Graft Rejection genetics, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Pancreas Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Pancreas graft status in simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplant (SPKTx) is currently assessed by nonspecific biochemical markers, typically amylase or lipase. Identifying a noninvasive biomarker with good sensitivity in detecting early pancreas graft rejection could improve SPKTx management., Methods: Here, we developed a pilot study to explore donor-derived cell-free DNA (dd-cfDNA) performance in predicting biopsy-proven acute rejection (P-BPAR) of the pancreas graft in a cohort of 36 SPKTx recipients with biopsy-matched plasma samples. dd-cfDNA was measured using the Prospera test (Natera, Inc.) and reported both as a fraction of the total cfDNA (fraction; %) and as concentration in the recipient's plasma (quantity; copies/mL)., Results: In the absence of P-BPAR, dd-cfDNA was significantly higher in samples collected within the first 45 d after SPKTx compared with those measured afterward (median, 1.00% versus 0.30%; median, 128.2 versus 35.3 cp/mL, respectively with both; P = 0.001). In samples obtained beyond day 45, P-BPAR samples presented a significantly higher dd-cfDNA fraction (0.83 versus 0.30%; P = 0.006) and quantity (81.3 versus 35.3 cp/mL; P = 0.001) than stable samples. Incorporating dd-cfDNA quantity along with dd-cfDNA fraction outperformed dd-cfDNA fraction alone to detect active rejection. Notably, when using a quantity cutoff of 70 cp/mL, dd-cfDNA detected P-BPAR with a sensitivity of 85.7% and a specificity of 93.7%, which was more accurate than current biomarkers (area under curve of 0.89 for dd-cfDNA (cp/ml) compared with 0.74 of lipase and 0.46 for amylase)., Conclusions: dd-cfDNA measurement through a simple noninvasive blood test could be incorporated into clinical practice to help inform graft management in SPKTx patients., Competing Interests: The other authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
- Published
- 2022
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22. Immunogenic and immunotolerogenic effects of extracorporeal photopheresis in high immunological risk kidney recipients. A single center case series.
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Xipell M, Molina-Andújar A, Cid J, Piñeiro GJ, Montagud-Marrahi E, Cofan F, Oppenheimer F, Rovira J, Diekmann F, and Lozano M
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- Graft Rejection therapy, Humans, Immunosuppression Therapy adverse effects, Kidney, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Photopheresis methods
- Abstract
The immunomodulatory effects of extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP) have been used for the treatment of T-cell mediated disorders, such as rejection in organ transplantation. Currently, it is an established therapy for heart and lung rejection, but not for kidney transplantation (KT), where experience is limited. In addition, some data suggest that ECP could generate an immune response against infections, thus being an alternative for the treatment of rejection in case of active or high-risk of infection. In the present study, we analyze four cases of use of ECP as concomitant therapy in patients with KT and high risk of opportunistic infections due to the high burden of immunosuppression throughout their renal diseases. Two patients had concomitant viral infection (cytomegalovirus and BK virus, respectively) and three patients were on treatment for graft rejection. In the two patients with active viral infection, the infection was successfully controlled during ECP treatment. In all cases, ECP has been shown to be a safe procedure, without complications., (© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2022
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23. Tailoring the dialysate bicarbonate eliminates pre-dialysis acidosis and post-dialysis alkalosis.
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Cuadrado E, Broseta JJ, Rodríguez-Espinosa D, Montagud-Marrahi E, Rodas L, Fontseré N, Arias-Guillén M, Rico N, and Maduell F
- Abstract
Background: Both metabolic acidosis and alkalosis increase hospitalizations, haemodynamic instability and mortality in haemodialysis patients. Unfortunately, current practices opt for a one-size-fits-all approach, leaving many patients either acidotic before or alkalotic after dialysis sessions. Therefore an individualized adjustment of these patients' dialysate bicarbonate prescriptions could reduce these acid-base imbalances., Methods: This is a prospective single-cohort study of patients on a chronic haemodiafiltration programme. The dialysate bicarbonate prescription was modified according to the pre- and post-dialysis total carbon dioxide (TCO
2 ) values of 19-25 mEq/L and ≤29 mEq/L, respectively, with an adjustment formula calculated with the data obtained from previously published work by our group. In addition, we analysed this adjustment's effect on plasma sodium, potassium, phosphorus, parathyroid hormone (PTH) and calcium., Results: At baseline, only 67.9% of patients were within the desired pre- and post-dialysis TCO2 target range. As of the first month, every followed patient met the TCO2 target range objective in pre-dialysis measurements and ˃95% met the post-dialysis TCO2 target. At the end of the study, 75% of the patients were on dialysate bicarbonate of 32-34 mEq/L. There were no clinically significant changes in calcium, phosphate, PTH, sodium or potassium levels. Also, we did not notice any increase in intradialytic adverse events., Conclusions: We suggest an individualized adjustment of the dialysate bicarbonate concentration according to the pre- and post-dialysis TCO2 values. With it, nearly every patient in our cohort reached the established range, potentially reducing their mortality risk., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the ERA.)- Published
- 2022
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24. Incidence of severe breakthrough SARS-CoV-2 infections in vaccinated kidney transplant and haemodialysis patients.
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Rodríguez-Espinosa D, Montagud-Marrahi E, Cacho J, Arana C, Taurizano N, Hermida E, Del Risco-Zevallos J, Casals J, Rosario A, Cuadrado-Payán E, Molina-Andújar A, Rodríguez N, Vilella A, Bodro M, Ventura-Aguiar P, Revuelta I, Cofàn F, Poch E, Oppenheimer F, Vera M, Rodas LM, Cases A, Bayés B, Diekmann F, Maduell F, Broseta JJ, and Cucchiari D
- Subjects
- BNT162 Vaccine, Humans, Incidence, Male, Prospective Studies, Renal Dialysis adverse effects, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Introduction: Given the increased COVID-19 observed in kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) and haemodialysis patients, several studies have tried to establish the efficacy of mRNA vaccines in these populations by evaluating their humoral and cellular responses. However, there is currently no information on clinical protection (deaths and hospitalizations), a gap that this study aims to fill., Methods: Observational prospective study involving 1,336 KTRs and haemodialysis patients from three dialysis units affiliated to Hospital Clínic of Barcelona, Spain, vaccinated with two doses of mRNA-1273 (Moderna) or BNT162b2 (Pfizer-BioNTech) SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccines. The outcomes measured were SARS-CoV-2 infection diagnosed by a positive RT-PCR fourteen days after the second vaccine dose, hospital admissions derived from infection, and a severe COVID-19 composite outcome, defined as either ICU admission, invasive and non-invasive mechanical ventilation, or death., Results: Six per cent (18/302) of patients on haemodialysis were infected, of whom four required hospital admission (1.3%), only one (0.3%) had severe COVID-19, and none of them died. In contrast, 4.3% (44/1034) of KTRs were infected, and presented more hospital admissions (26 patients, 2.5%), severe COVID-19 (11 patients, 1.1%) or death (4 patients, 0.4%). KTRs had a significantly higher risk of hospital admission than HD patients, and this risk increased with age and male sex (HR 3.37 and 4.74, respectively)., Conclusions: The study highlights the need for booster doses in KTRs. In contrast, the haemodialysis population appears to have an adequate clinical response to vaccination, at least up to four months from its administration., (© 2022. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to Italian Society of Nephrology.)
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- 2022
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25. Impact of Simultaneous Pancreas-kidney Transplantation on Cardiovascular Risk in Patients With Diabetes.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Molina-Andújar A, Pané A, Ruiz S, Amor AJ, Esmatjes E, Ferrer J, Banon-Maneus E, Hermida E, Musquera M, Fondevila C, Diekmann F, and Ventura-Aguiar P
- Subjects
- Adult, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Humans, Pancreas, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases diagnosis, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 complications, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 diagnosis, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 surgery, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Pancreas Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Cardiovascular disease is the major cause of death in patients with type 1 diabetes. Of the available risk predictors for this population, the Steno Type 1 Risk Engine (STENO T1) is the only one that includes kidney function as a risk factor, which is a well-described independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease., Methods: We explore how simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation (SPKT) modifies the predicted cardiovascular risk by the STENO T1 through a retrospective study including recipients of a first SPKT between 2000 and 2016., Results: Two hundred sixty-eight SPKT recipients with a mean age of 40 y old and a median follow-up of 10 y were included. Before transplantation, the expected incidence of cardiovascular events (CVEs) at 5 and 10 y according to STENO T1 would have been 31% and 50%, respectively, contrasting with an actual incidence of 9.3% and 16% for the same timepoints, respectively (P < 0.05). These differences were attenuated when STENO T1 was recalculated assuming 12th-mo glomerular filtration rate (at 5 and 10 y predicted CVE incidence was 10.5% and 19.4%, respectively). Early pancreas graft failure (hazard ratio [HR] 3.00, 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.14-7.88; P = 0.02) was an independent risk factor for post-SPKT CVE, alongside kidney graft failure (HR 2.90, 95% CI, 1.53-5.48; P = 0.001), and diabetes duration (HR 1.04, 95% CI, 1.00-1.09, P = 0.04)., Conclusions: SPKT decreases in more than two-thirds of the predicted cardiovascular risk by the STENO T1. A functioning pancreas graft further reduces CVE risk, independently of kidney graft function., Competing Interests: The authors declare no funding or conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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26. Impact of insulin therapy before donation on graft outcomes in pancreas transplantation: An analysis of the OPTN/UNOS database.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Amor AJ, Molina-Andujar A, Cucchiari D, Revuelta I, Esforzado N, Cofan F, Oppenheimer F, Torregrosa V, Casals J, Ferrer J, Esmatjes E, Ramírez-Bajo MJ, Musquera M, Bayes B, Campistol JM, Diekmann F, and Ventura-Aguiar P
- Subjects
- Humans, Insulin, Pancreas Transplantation
- Abstract
Aims: Information on the impact of insulin therapy before pancreas donation on pancreas outcomes is scarce. We aim to explore the influence of insulin therapy before donation on recipient and pancreas graft survival., Methods: Registry study including 12,841 pancreas recipients from the OPTN/UNOS registry performed between 2000 and 2017. Inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) was used to account for covariate imbalance between recipients from a donor with and without insulin requirements., Results: A total of 7765 (60%) patients received a pancreas from a donor with insulin before donation (IBD). Pancreas graft survival (death-censored) was similar between recipients from IBD and non-IBD donors at 1, 5 and 10 years (89% vs 89%, 78% vs 79 and 69% vs 70%, respectively, P = 0.35). Recipients from IBD donors presented a similar 90-days pancreas graft survival. After IPTW weighting, IBD donors were neither associated with any post-transplant surgical complication (HR 1.11 [95% CI 0.98-1.24], P = 0.06), nor with risk for recipient death (HR 0.94 [95% CI 0.85-1.04], P = 0.26), nor pancreas graft failure (HR 1.06 [95% CI 0.98-1.16], P = 0.15)., Conclusions: Insulin therapy before donation in accepted pancreas donors was not associated, per se, with an impaired pancreas graft and patient survival., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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27. SARS-CoV-2 Infection After Full Vaccination in Kidney Transplant Recipients.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Cucchiari D, Cuadrado-Payán E, Cofan F, Torregrosa JV, Ventura-Aguiar P, Revuelta I, Bodro M, Piñeiro GJ, Esforzado N, Campistol JM, Oppenheimer F, Marcos MÁ, Bayés B, Moreno A, and Diekmann F
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Vaccination, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 Vaccines administration & dosage, Kidney Transplantation, Transplant Recipients
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare no funding or conflicts of interest.
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- 2021
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28. Influence of Persistent Inflammation in Follow-Up Biopsies After Antibody-Mediated Rejection in Kidney Transplantation.
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Piñeiro GJ, Montagud-Marrahi E, Ríos J, Ventura-Aguiar P, Cucchiari D, Revuelta I, Lozano M, Cid J, Cofan F, Esforzado N, Palou E, Oppenheimer F, Campistol JM, Bayés-Genís B, Rovira J, and Diekmann F
- Abstract
Background: Despite recent advances in immunosuppression treatment, antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR) remains the leading cause of kidney graft loss. Information about prognostic markers and the efficacy of treatment is scarce. Methods: Retrospective study with kidney recipients diagnosed an active ABMR from January 1, 2004 to December 31, 2019 to explore the influence of persistent inflammation in follow-up biopsies on graft survival after ABMR treatment. Results: About 116 patients were included. Active ABMR were treated with a combination of plasma exchange (PE), intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg), rituximab, and steroids. At 6 months of treatment, 63 (54.3%) patients presented a stabilization or improvement in kidney-graft function. The effectiveness varied depending on the timepoint of the presentation between transplantation and rejection, which is lower for those with late ABMR (63 vs. 21% for early vs. late ABMR, respectively). Ninety patients (77%) underwent a control biopsy after ABMR treatment, from which 46 (51%) responded to the treatment. Microvascular inflammation (MVI) persisted in 64 (71%) biopsies, whereas tubulitis persisted in 17 (19%) biopsies. Death-censored graft survival at 1 year was significantly lower in patients with persistent MVI (86% vs. 95% without persistent MVI, P = 0.002), or with persistent tubulitis (44% vs. 66% without tubulitis, P = 0.02). In the Cox Regression analysis, the persistence of MVI [hazard ratio (HR), 4.50 (95%CI, 1.35-14.96), P = 0.01] and tubulitis [HR 2.88 95%CI (1.24-6.69), P = 0.01) in follow-up biopsies significantly increased the risk of graft failure. Conclusion: Persistent inflammation in follow-up biopsies after ABMR treatment was associated with an increased risk of graft loss, even without meeting Banff rejection criteria. Study Registration: Agencia Española de Medicamentos y Productos Sanitarios (AEMPS): 14566/RG 24161. Study code: UTRINM-2017-01., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Piñeiro, Montagud-Marrahi, Ríos, Ventura-Aguiar, Cucchiari, Revuelta, Lozano, Cid, Cofan, Esforzado, Palou, Oppenheimer, Campistol, Bayés-Genís, Rovira and Diekmann.)
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- 2021
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29. Rapid re-transplantation safety following early kidney graft loss.
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Rodríguez-Espinosa D, Broseta JJ, Hermida E, Cuadrado E, Guillén-Olmos E, Montagud-Marrahi E, and Diekmann F
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Graft Rejection diagnosis, Graft Rejection epidemiology, Histocompatibility Testing, Humans, Kidney Failure, Chronic diagnosis, Kidney Failure, Chronic epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Selection, Reoperation adverse effects, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Graft Rejection surgery, Graft Survival, Kidney Failure, Chronic surgery, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Postoperative Complications epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Early graft loss is a devastating kidney transplant complication associated with high mortality and an increased risk of sensitization to antigens from the failed graft. Moreover, if rapid re-transplantation were to occur, given that the human leukocyte antigen antibodies identification may not be reliable until several weeks after transplantation, the recipient's immunological status would be uncertain. Hence, there could be an increased immunological risk. To date, there is no information on whether a rapid re-transplantation after early graft loss, without a new reliable anti-HLA determination, is safe., Methods: We retrospectively analysed the number of rejections and the graft survival of re-transplanted patients with early graft loss (defined as graft failure before 30 days from transplant) from our centre between June 2003 and November 2019. The studied population was divided into rapid re-transplantation (performed within 30 days of early graft loss) and late re-transplantation (performed beyond those 30 days)., Results: Forty-seven patients were re-transplanted after early graft loss. There were nine rapid re-transplantation cases with an 89% five-year graft survival and one antibody-mediated rejection episode. Furthermore, we identified 38 cases of late re-transplantation with a 69% five-year graft survival, 4 T cell-mediated, and 11 antibody-mediated rejections., Conclusions: Rapid re-transplantation appears to be safe and does not entail increased rejection risk, nor does it impact long-term graft survival when compared to late re-transplantation., (© 2021 Asian Pacific Society of Nephrology.)
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- 2021
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30. Weight gain following pancreas transplantation in type 1 diabetes is associated with a worse glycemic profile: A retrospective cohort study.
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Amor AJ, Casas A, Pané A, Ruiz S, Montagud-Marrahi E, Molina-Andújar A, Ruiz M, Mayordomo R, Musquera M, Ferrer-Fàbrega J, Fondevila C, Diekmann F, Ventura-Aguiar P, and Esmatjes E
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- Blood Glucose, Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Retrospective Studies, Weight Gain, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 surgery, Pancreas Transplantation
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Aims: Evaluate the weight trajectories after pancreas transplantation (PT) and their relationships with pancreas graft outcomes in type 1 diabetes (T1D)., Methods: Retrospective cohort study. T1D individuals who underwent PT were recruited (T1D-PT; n = 194) and divided into three groups according to transplantation date: 1999-2004 (n = 57), 2005-2009 (n = 79), 2010-2015 (n = 58). For weight comparisons, a random sample of T1D without renal impairment was also recruited during 2015 (n = 61; T1D-control)., Results: The median follow-up for the T1D-PT group was 11.1 years. Despite significant weight loss at 6 months (65.7 ± 12.4 vs. 64.1 ± 11.4 Kg; p < 0.001), a stepped increase was seen thereafter (60 months: 68.0 ± 14.0 Kg; p < 0.001). Participants from the 2010-2015 period showed higher weight gain (p < 0.001), outweighing that observed in the T1D-control (60 months: +4.69 ± 8.49 vs. -0.97 ± 4.59 Kg; p = 0.003). Weight gain between 6 and 36 months was directly associated with fasting glucose and HbA1c at 36 months, and with HbA1c at 60 months (p < 0.05). However, in Cox-regression models adjusted for age, sex, and several recipient and PT-related variables, the third tertile of weight gain between 6 and 36 months showed a non-significant increase in the graft failure/dysfunction (HR 2.33 [0.75-7.27])., Conclusions: Weight gain post-PT was associated with glucose-related biochemical markers of graft dysfunction, which needs confirmation in further studies., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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31. Donor insulin use during stay in the intensive care unit should not preclude pancreas transplantation.
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Ventura-Aguiar P, Montagud-Marrahi E, Amor AJ, and Diekmann F
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- Graft Survival, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Tissue Donors, Insulins, Pancreas Transplantation
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- 2021
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32. The impact of functional delayed graft function in the modern era of kidney transplantation - A retrospective study.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Molina-Andújar A, Rovira J, Revuelta I, Ventura-Aguiar P, Piñeiro G, Ugalde-Altamirano J, Perna F, Torregrosa JV, Oppenheimer F, Esforzado N, Cofán F, Campistol JM, Herrera-Garcia A, Ríos J, Diekmann F, and Cucchiari D
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- Delayed Graft Function, Graft Rejection, Graft Survival, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Tissue Donors, Kidney Transplantation
- Abstract
The dialysis-based definition of Delayed Graft Function (dDGF) is not necessarily objective as it depends on the individual physician's decision. The functional definition of DGF (fDGF, the failure of serum creatinine to decrease by at least 10% daily on 3 consecutive days during the first week post-transplant), may be more sensitive to reflect recovery after the ischemia-reperfusion injury. We retrospectively analyzed both definitions in 253 deceased donor kidney transplant recipients for predicting death-censored graft failure as primary outcome, using eGFR < 25 ml/min/1.73 m
2 as a surrogate end-point for graft failure. Secondary outcome was a composite outcome that included graft failure as above and also patient's death. Median follow-up was 3.22 [2.38-4.21] years. Seventy-nine patients developed dDGF (31.2%) and 127 developed fDGF (50.2%). Sixty-three patients fulfilled criteria for both definitions (24.9%). At multivariable analysis, the two definitions were significantly associated with the primary [HR (95%CI) 2.07 (1.09-3.94), P = 0.026 for fDGF and HR (95%CI) 2.41 (1.33-4.37), P = 0.004 for dDGF] and the secondary composite outcome [HR (95%CI) 1.58 (1.01-2.51), P = 0.047 for fDGF and HR (95%CI) 1.67 (1.05-2.66), P = 0.028 for dDGF]. Patients who met criteria for both definitions had the worst prognosis, with a three-year estimates (95%CI) of survival from the primary and secondary outcomes of 2.31 (2.02-2.59) and 2.20 (1.91-2.49) years for fDGF+/dDGF+, in comparison with the other groups (P < 0.01 for trend). fDGF provides supplementary information about graft outcomes on top of the dDGF definition in a modern series of kidney transplantation., (© 2020 Steunstichting ESOT. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2021
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33. SARS-CoV-2 Infection in a Spanish Cohort of CKD-5D Patients: Prevalence, Clinical Presentation, Outcomes, and De-Isolation Results.
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Broseta JJ, Rodríguez-Espinosa D, Cuadrado E, Guillén-Olmos E, Hermida E, Montagud-Marrahi E, Rodas L, Vera M, Fontseré N, Arias M, Cases A, and Maduell F
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- Aftercare, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Asymptomatic Infections epidemiology, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 transmission, COVID-19 Testing, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Comorbidity, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Dyslipidemias epidemiology, Female, Fever etiology, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Immunocompromised Host, Male, Middle Aged, Peritoneal Dialysis, Prevalence, Prognosis, Renal Dialysis, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic therapy, Severity of Illness Index, Smoking epidemiology, Spain epidemiology, Survivors, COVID-19 epidemiology, Patient Isolation, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic epidemiology, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Introduction: COVID-19 is a highly contagious disease that has easily spread worldwide. Outpatient maintenance hemodialysis seems to entail an increased risk of contagion, and previous reports inform of increased mortality among this population., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed clinical and laboratory parameters, outcomes, and management once discharged of CKD-5D patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 from our health area., Results: Out of the 429 CKD-5D population, 36 were diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 infection (8%): 34 on in-center hemodialysis and 2 on peritoneal dialysis. Five were asymptomatic. The most common symptom was fever (70%), followed by dyspnea and cough. History of cardiovascular disease and elevation of LDH and C-reactive protein during admission were associated with higher mortality. Thirteen patients died (36%), 8 patients were admitted to an ICU, and survival was low (38%) among the latter. The mean time to death was 12 days. Most discharged patients got negative rRT-PCR in nasopharyngeal swabs within 26 days of diagnosis. However, there is a portion of cured patients that continue to have positive results even more than 2 months after the initial presentation., Conclusions: Patients on dialysis have an increased mortality risk if infected with SARS-CoV-2. Preventive measures have proven useful. Thus, proper ones, such as universal screening of the population and isolation when required, need to be generalized. Better de-isolation criteria are necessary to ensure an appropriate use of public health resources., (© 2020 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2021
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34. A hybrid data envelopment analysis-artificial neural network prediction model for COVID-19 severity in transplant recipients.
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Revuelta I, Santos-Arteaga FJ, Montagud-Marrahi E, Ventura-Aguiar P, Di Caprio D, Cofan F, Cucchiari D, Torregrosa V, Piñeiro GJ, Esforzado N, Bodro M, Ugalde-Altamirano J, Moreno A, Campistol JM, Alcaraz A, Bayès B, Poch E, Oppenheimer F, and Diekmann F
- Abstract
In an overwhelming demand scenario, such as the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, pressure over health systems may outburst their predicted capacity to deal with such extreme situations. Therefore, in order to successfully face a health emergency, scientific evidence and validated models are needed to provide real-time information that could be applied by any health center, especially for high-risk populations, such as transplant recipients. We have developed a hybrid prediction model whose accuracy relative to several alternative configurations has been validated through a battery of clustering techniques. Using hospital admission data from a cohort of hospitalized transplant patients, our hybrid Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA)-Artificial Neural Network (ANN) model extrapolates the progression towards severe COVID-19 disease with an accuracy of 96.3%, outperforming any competing model, such as logistic regression (65.5%) and random forest (44.8%). In this regard, DEA-ANN allows us to categorize the evolution of patients through the values of the analyses performed at hospital admission. Our prediction model may help guiding COVID-19 management through the identification of key predictors that permit a sustainable management of resources in a patient-centered model., Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10462-021-10008-0., Competing Interests: Conflict of interestThe authors declare no competing interests., (© The Author(s) 2021.)
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- 2021
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35. Living donor kidney transplantation is an effective option of renal replacement therapy in patients with light-chain amyloidosis (AL).
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Guillen E, Montagud-Marrahi E, Rodriguez DM, Hermida E, Padilla RA, Blasco M, Cibeira MT, Martino R, Fernandez de Larrea C, Campistol JM, and Quintana LF
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- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Renal Replacement Therapy, Immunoglobulin Light-chain Amyloidosis blood, Immunoglobulin Light-chain Amyloidosis surgery, Kidney Transplantation, Living Donors
- Published
- 2020
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36. Determining factors for hemodiafiltration to equal or exceed the performance of expanded hemodialysis.
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Maduell F, Broseta JJ, Gómez M, Racionero P, Montagud-Marrahi E, Rodas L, Arias-Guillén M, Fontseré N, Vera M, and Rico N
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Kidney Failure, Chronic blood, Kidney Failure, Chronic urine, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Hemodiafiltration statistics & numerical data, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Renal Dialysis statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The aim of the study was to compare expanded hemodialysis (HDx) with hemodiafiltration (HDF) at different infusion flows to identify the main determinants, namely blood flow (Qb), replacement volume, infusion flow (Qi), ultrafiltration flow (Q
uf ), filtration fraction (FF), and the point at which the effectiveness of HDF equals or exceeds that of HDx. We conducted a prospective, single-center study in 12 patients. Each patient underwent 12 dialysis sessions: six sessions with Qb 350 and six with Qb 400 mL/min; with each Qb, one session was with HDx and five sessions were with FX80 (one in HD, and four with Qi 50, 75, 90/100 mL/min or autosubstitution in postdilution HDF). The reduction ratios (RR) of urea, creatinine, ß2 -microglobulin, myoglobin, prolactin, α1 -microglobulin, α1 -acid glycoprotein, and albumin were compared intraindividually and the global removal score (GRS) was calculated. The mean replacement volume with Qb 350 mL/min was 13.77 ± 0.92 L with Qi 50 mL/min, 20.75 ± 1.17 L with Qi 75, 23.83 ± 1.92 L with Qi 90, and 27.51 ± 2.77 L with autosubstitution. Similar results were obtained with Qb 400 mL/min, and the results were only slightly higher with Qi 100 mL/min or in autosubstitution. The GRS was positively correlated with replacement volume with Qb 350 (R2 = 0.583) and with Qb 400 (R2 = 0.584); with Quf with Qb 350 (R2 = 0.556) and with Qb 400 (R2 = 0.604); and also with FF with Qb 350 (R2 = 0.556) and with Qb 400 mL/min (R2 = 0.603). The minimum convective volume in HDF from which it is possible to overcome the efficacy of HDx was 19.2 L with Qb 350 and 17.6 L with Qb 400 mL/min. The cut-off point of Quf at which HDF exceeded the effectiveness of HDx was 80.6 mL/min with Qb 350 and 74.1 mL/min with Qb 400 mL/min. The cut-off point at which FF in HDF exceeded the effectiveness of the HDx was 23.0% with Qb 350 and 18.6% with Qb 400 mL/min. In conclusion, this study confirms the superiority of postdilution HDF over HDx when replacement volume, convective volume, Quf , or FF exceeds certain values. Increasing the Qb in postdilution HDF manages to increase the convective dose and more easily overcome the HDx., (© 2020 International Center for Artificial Organs and Transplantation and Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)- Published
- 2020
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37. Preliminary data on outcomes of SARS-CoV-2 infection in a Spanish single center cohort of kidney recipients.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Cofan F, Torregrosa JV, Cucchiari D, Ventura-Aguiar P, Revuelta I, Bodro M, Piñeiro GJ, Esforzado N, Ugalde J, Guillén E, Rodríguez-Espinosa D, Campistol JM, Oppenheimer F, Moreno A, and Diekmann F
- Subjects
- COVID-19, Coronavirus Infections therapy, Coronavirus Infections transmission, Disease Transmission, Infectious statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral therapy, Pneumonia, Viral transmission, Preliminary Data, SARS-CoV-2, Spain epidemiology, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Disease Management, Disease Transmission, Infectious prevention & control, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology, Transplant Recipients
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- 2020
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38. Comparison of Solute Removal Properties Between High-Efficient Dialysis Modalities in Low Blood Flow Rate.
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Maduell F, Broseta JJ, Rodas L, Montagud-Marrahi E, Rodriguez-Espinosa D, Hermida E, Arias-Guillén M, Fontseré N, Vera M, Gómez M, González B, and Rico N
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Blood Flow Velocity physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Kidney Failure, Chronic physiopathology, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Renal Dialysis methods
- Abstract
Blood flow (Qb) is one of the dialysis parameters most strongly influencing the performance of dialysis modalities. However, few studies have compared different dialysis modalities in patients with low Qb. We conducted a prospective, single-center study in 21 patients. Each patient underwent four dialysis sessions with routine dialysis parameters: high-flux hemodialysis (HD), predilution hemodiafiltration (pre-HDF), expanded HD (HDx), and postdilution HDF (post-HDF). The removal ratios (RR) of urea, creatinine, ß
2 -microglobulin, myoglobin, prolactin, α1 -microglobulin, free kappa and lambda immunoglobulin light chains (ķFLC and λFLC), α1 -acid glycoprotein, and albumin were compared intraindividually. A proportional part of the dialysate was collected to quantify albumin loss. There were no differences in urea and creatinine RRs. The β2 -microglobulin RR was higher in pre-HDF and post-HDF. Myoglobin and prolactin RRs were higher with HDx and post-HDF. The α1 -microglobulin and α1 -acid glycoprotein RRs were significantly higher with post-HDF than with other treatments, and RRs obtained with HDx were higher than obtained with HD and pre-HDF. Free ķFLC and λFLC RRs showed the following results in ascending order: HD, pre-HDF, HDx, and post-HDF, most of them with statistical significance. Albumin loss varied from 0.45 g with HD to 3.5 g with post-HDF. The global removal score values were 41.0 ± 4.8% with HD, 44.0 ± 5.2% with pre-HDF, 49.5 ± 4.6% with HDx, and 54.8 ± 5.3% with post-HDF, with significant differences between all treatment modalities. In conclusion, this study confirms the superiority of post-HDF over high-flux HD, pre-HDF, and HDx in patients with low Qb. HDx was the closest alternative to post-HDF and was clearly superior to HD and pre-HDF. Finally, pre-HDF was also superior to HD. With this Qb, there was a higher risk of underdialysis, both diffusive and convective, especially in patients with a session duration of less than 5 h., (© 2019 International Society for Apheresis, Japanese Society for Apheresis, and Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy.)- Published
- 2020
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39. Use of De Novo mTOR Inhibitors in Hypersensitized Kidney Transplant Recipients: Experience From Clinical Practice.
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Cucchiari D, Molina-Andujar A, Montagud-Marrahi E, Revuelta I, Rovira J, Ventura-Aguiar P, Piñeiro GJ, De Sousa-Amorim E, Esforzado N, Cofán F, Torregrosa JV, Ugalde-Altamirano J, Ricart MJ, Centellas-Pérez FJ, Solè M, Martorell J, Ríos J, Campistol JM, Diekmann F, and Oppenheimer F
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Calcineurin Inhibitors administration & dosage, Calcineurin Inhibitors adverse effects, Desensitization, Immunologic adverse effects, Drug Therapy, Combination adverse effects, Drug Therapy, Combination methods, Everolimus administration & dosage, Everolimus adverse effects, Female, Glucocorticoids administration & dosage, Glucocorticoids adverse effects, Graft Rejection immunology, HLA Antigens immunology, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents adverse effects, Isoantibodies immunology, Male, Middle Aged, Mycophenolic Acid administration & dosage, Mycophenolic Acid adverse effects, Retrospective Studies, Sirolimus administration & dosage, Sirolimus adverse effects, TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases immunology, Tacrolimus administration & dosage, Tacrolimus adverse effects, Treatment Outcome, Desensitization, Immunologic methods, Graft Rejection prevention & control, Immunosuppressive Agents administration & dosage, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Background: It is commonly believed that mTOR inhibitors (mTORi) should not be used in high-immunological risk kidney transplant recipients due to a perceived increased risk of rejection. However, almost all trials that examined the association of optimal-dose mTORi with calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) have excluded hypersensitized recipients from enrollment., Methods: To shed light on this issue, we examined 71 consecutive patients with a baseline calculated panel reactive antibody (cPRA) ≥50% that underwent kidney transplantation from June 2013 to December 2016 in our unit. Immunosuppression was based on CNI (tacrolimus), steroids and alternatively mycophenolic acid (MPA; n = 38), or mTORi (either everolimus or sirolimus, n = 33, target trough levels 3-8 ng/mL)., Results: Demographic and immunological risk profiles were similar, and almost 90% of patients in both groups received induction with lymphocyte-depleting agents. Cox-regression analysis of rejection-free survival revealed better results for mTORi versus MPA in terms of biopsy-proven acute rejection (hazard ratio [confidence interval], 0.32 [0.11-0.90], P = 0.031 at univariable analysis and 0.34 [0.11-0.95], P = 0.040 at multivariable analysis). There were no differences in 1-year renal function, Banff chronicity score at 3- and 12-month protocol biopsy and development of de novo donor-specific antibodies. Tacrolimus trough levels along the first year were not different between groups (12-mo levels were 8.72 ± 2.93 and 7.85 ± 3.07 ng/mL for MPA and mTORi group respectively, P = 0.277)., Conclusions: This single-center retrospective cohort analysis suggests that in hypersensitized kidney transplant recipients receiving tacrolimus-based immunosuppressive therapy similar clinical outcomes may be obtained using mTOR inhibitors compared to mycophenolate.
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- 2020
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40. Liposomal iron in moderate chronic kidney disease.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Arrizabalaga P, Abellana R, and Poch E
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Liposomes, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Treatment Outcome, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency drug therapy, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency etiology, Iron Compounds administration & dosage, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic complications
- Abstract
Introduction and Objective: The optimal iron supplementation route of administration (intravenous vs oral) in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) not on dialysis is a hot topic of debate. An oral preparation (liposomal iron, FeSu) has recently been developed with high bioavailability and low incidence of side effects. The objective was to evaluate the efficacy of FeSu in patients with stage 3 CKD and gastrointestinal intolerance to conventional oral iron therapy., Material and Methods: Prospective observational study of patients with stable stage 3 CKD and gastrointestinal intolerance to conventional oral iron therapy. An oral 30mg/day dose of FeSu was administered for 12 months. The primary outcome measure was haemoglobin increase at 6 and 12 months. Treatment adherence and adverse effects were also evaluated., Results: 37 patients aged 72.6±14.7 years and with an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of 42±10ml/min/1.73m
2 were included. 32 patients had received previous treatment with conventional oral formulations, 73% of which exhibited gastrointestinal intolerance with treatment adherence of 9.4%. After 6 months with FeSu, an increase in haemoglobin was observed versus baseline, which was sustained at 12 months (0.49±0.19 and 0.36±0.19g/dl, respectively, P<.05), despite a significant eGFR decrease of 3.16±1.16 and 4.20±1.28ml/min/1.73 m2 at 6 and 12 months, respectively. None of the patients experienced adverse reactions that required the treatment to be suspended. Adherence was 100% at both 6 and 12 months., Conclusions: FeSu is effective in a cohort of patients with stage 3 CKD with similar characteristics to the general population of moderate CKD patients, with a low rate of adverse reactions and excellent tolerability., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U.)- Published
- 2020
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41. Combination of calcineurin and mTOR inhibitors in kidney transplantation: a propensity score analysis based on current clinical practice.
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Cucchiari D, Ríos J, Molina-Andujar A, Montagud-Marrahi E, Revuelta I, Ventura-Aguiar P, Piñeiro GJ, De Sousa-Amorim E, Esforzado N, Cofán F, Torregrosa JV, Ugalde-Altamirano J, Ricart MJ, Rovira J, Torres F, Solè M, Campistol JM, Diekmann F, and Oppenheimer F
- Subjects
- Calcineurin, Calcineurin Inhibitors adverse effects, Graft Rejection prevention & control, Graft Survival, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents adverse effects, Mycophenolic Acid adverse effects, Propensity Score, TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases, Tacrolimus adverse effects, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Introduction: The TRANSFORM study demonstrated that an immunosuppression based on a combination of calcineurin inhibitors and de-novo mTOR inhibitors (mTORi) is safe and effective in kidney transplant recipients. However, data that validate this approach in clinical practice are currently missing., Materials and Methods: Analysis of 401 kidney transplant recipients transplanted from June 2013 to December 2016. All patients received tacrolimus with prednisone in combination with either mycophenolate (n = 186) or mTORi (either everolimus or sirolimus, n = 215). A propensity score to receive mTORi was calculated based on the inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) from the following parameters: age and sex of donor and recipient, BMI, previous transplants, diabetes, cPRA, dialysis before transplantation, dialysis vintage, type of donor, ABO-incompatibility, HLA-mismatches, induction and ischemia time. Median follow-up was 2.6 [1.9; 3.7] years., Results: Cox-regression analysis suggests good results for mTORi versus MPA in terms of 1-year biopsy-proven acute rejection (BPAR, P = 0.063), 1-year graft loss (P = 0.025) and patient survival (P < 0.001). Results observed for BPAR and graft failure were largely attributed to those patients that would have been excluded by the TRANSFORM because of some exclusion criteria (52.9% of the population, P = 0.003 for 1-year BPAR and P = 0.040 for graft loss). In patients who met selection criteria for TRANSFORM, no effect of treatment for BPAR or graft failure was observed, while the beneficial effect on overall survival persisted., Conclusions: In a real-life setting, a protocol based on de-novo mTORi with tacrolimus and prednisone could be employed as a standard immunosuppressive regimen and was associated with good outcomes.
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- 2020
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42. Successful use of nonantigen-specific immunoadsorption with antihuman Ig-columns in kidney graft antibody-mediated rejection.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Revuelta I, Cucchiari D, Piñeiro GJ, Ventura-Aguiar P, Lozano M, Cid J, Martorell J, Solé M, Quintana LF, Oppenheimer F, Diekmann F, Poch E, Campistol JM, and Blasco M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Antibodies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Graft Survival, Humans, Immunoglobulins, Intravenous, Male, Middle Aged, Plasmapheresis, Regeneration, Retrospective Studies, Graft Rejection, Immune System immunology, Immunoglobulin G immunology, Kidney Transplantation methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Nonantigen-specific immunoadsorption (IA) has proven to be effective in acute antibody-mediated rejection (aAMR). However, there is a lack of solid studies evaluating the safety and efficacy of IA with antihuman Ig-columns in aAMR. For chronic-active AMR (cAMR), no studies have evaluated the efficacy of nonantingen-specific IA with antihuman Ig-columns. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the role of nonantigen-specific IA with antihuman Ig-columns in the treatment of both aAMR and cAMR in kidney transplantation., Material and Methods: In retrospective and observational study, kidney graft and recipient survival rates were assessed after treatment of aAMR and cAMR with nonantigen-specific IA with Ig-Flex columns (Therasorb) between January 2012 and May 2018. Protocols included nonantigen-specific IA, rituximab, intravenous immunoglobulin, and rescue plasma exchange, if necessary., Results: The study included 14 patients with AMR (acute in 9, chronic active in 5). For aAMR, mean follow-up was 13 ± 6 months, and patient and graft survival were, respectively, of 100% and 83%, with a mean increase in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of 7.98 ± 12.96, 10.18 ± 16.71, and 11.43 ± 13.85 mL/min/1.72 m
2 (P > .05) at 3, 12 months after treatment, and at the end of follow-up, respectively. For cAMR, mean follow-up was 14 ± 8 months, and patient and graft survival were, respectively, of 100% and 60%, with an average increase in eGFR of 4.30 ± 7.86, 5.64 ± 10.47, and 14.5 ± 7.86 mL/min/m2 (P > .05) at 3, 12 months after IA treatment, and at the end of the follow-up, respectively, although 40% did not respond and required chronic hemodialysis., Conclusion: Nonantigen-specific IA with Ig-Flex columns was safe and effective for aAMR treatment in kidney transplantation. In cAMR, IA with Ig-Flex columns was associated with a satisfactory kidney graft survival, suggesting that IA could potentially offer some benefits supporting its indication in cAMR., (© 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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43. Optimization of dialysate bicarbonate in patients treated with online haemodiafiltration.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Broseta J, Rodriguez-Espinosa D, Lidia R, Hermida-Lama E, Xipell M, Arias-Guillén M, Fontseré N, Vera M, Bedini JL, Rico N, and Maduell F
- Abstract
Background: Metabolic acidosis is a common problem in haemodialysis patients, but acidosis overcorrection has been associated with higher mortality. There is no clear definition of the optimal serum bicarbonate target or dialysate bicarbonate. This study analysed the impact of reducing dialysate bicarbonate from 35 to 32 mEq/L on plasma bicarbonate levels in a cohort of patients treated with online haemodiafiltration (OL-HDF)., Methods: We performed a prospective cohort study with patients in a stable chronic OL-HDF programme for at least 12 months in the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona. We analysed pre- and post-dialysis total carbon dioxide(TCO
2) before and after dialysate bicarbonate reduction from 35 to 32 mEq/L, as well as the number of patients with a pre- and post-dialysis TCO2 within 19-25 and ≤29 mEq/L, respectively, after the bicarbonate modification. Changes in serum sodium, potassium, calcium, phosphorous and parathyroid hormone (PTH) were also assessed., Results: We included 84 patients with a 6-month follow-up. At 6 months, pre- and post-dialysis TCO2 significantly decreased (26.78 ± 1.26 at baseline to 23.69 ± 1.92 mEq/L and 31.91 ± 0.91 to 27.58 ± 1.36 mEq/L, respectively). The number of patients with a pre-dialysis TCO2 >25 mEq/L was significantly reduced from 80 (90.5%) to 17 (20.2%) and for post-dialysis TCO2 >29 mEq/L this number was reduced from 83 (98.8%) to 9 (10.7%). PTH significantly decreased from 226.09 (range 172-296) to 182.50 (125-239) pg/mL at 6 months (P < 0.05) and post-dialysis potassium decreased from 3.16 ± 0.30 to 2.95 ± 0.48 mEq/L at 6 months (P < 0.05). Sodium, pre-dialysis potassium, calcium and phosphorous did not change significantly., Conclusions: Reducing dialysate bicarbonate concentration by 3 mEq/L significantly and safely decreased pre- and post-dialysis TCO2 , avoiding acidosis overcorrection and improving secondary hyperparathyroidism control. An individualized bicarbonate prescription (a key factor in the adequate control of acidosis) according to pre-dialysis TCO2 is suggested based on these results., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA.)- Published
- 2020
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44. SARS-CoV-2 and influenza virus co-infection.
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Cuadrado-Payán E, Montagud-Marrahi E, Torres-Elorza M, Bodro M, Blasco M, Poch E, Soriano A, and Piñeiro GJ
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- Betacoronavirus, COVID-19, China, Coronavirus Infections, Humans, Inpatients, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, SARS-CoV-2, Coinfection, Orthomyxoviridae, Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus
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- 2020
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45. Cardiovascular risk factors and cardiovascular disease in patients with type 1 diabetes and end-stage renal disease candidates for kidney-pancreas transplantation: Trends from 1999 to 2017.
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Ruiz S, Amor AJ, Pané A, Molina-Andujar A, Montagud-Marrahi E, Ventura-Aguiar P, Ferrer-Fàbrega J, and Esmatjes E
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- Adult, Female, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 complications, Kidney Failure, Chronic etiology, Kidney Transplantation methods, Pancreas Transplantation methods
- Abstract
Aims: To evaluate the changes in cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) in patients with type 1 diabetes (T1D) and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) who were candidates for kidney-pancreas transplantation (KPTx) from 1999 to 2017., Methods: Patients with T1D referred for KPTx evaluation were included. The cohort was divided into five groups according to the year of evaluation (1999-2002, 2003-2006, 2007-2010, 2011-2014 and 2015-2017). The control of CVRFs and the prevalence of prior CVD were evaluated., Results: We evaluated 360 patients (64.4% men, age 38.9 ± 7.1 years). LDL-cholesterol <100 mg/dl increased from 22.7% to 76.9% (1999-2002 vs. 2015-2017; p < 0.001), as did the use of statins (from 24.7% to 74.5%; p < 0.001). Systolic blood pressure decreased from 138.8 ± 27.6 to 125.1 ± 27.9 mmHg (p = 0.001) and current smokers from 48% to 25% (p = 0.018). Intensive insulin treatment increased from 34.4% to 93.6% (p < 0.001). Diabetes duration before the initiation of renal replacement therapy increased from 23 ± 5.5 to 26.9 ± 8.9 years (p = 0.001). Overall, 30.3% had previous CVD, without significant changes over time (p = 0.699), albeit patients were older and had longer diabetes duration., Conclusions: Patients with T1D and ESRD referred for KPTx have better control of CVRFs over time, which might lead to a decrease in cardiovascular events., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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46. The renal range of the κ/λ sFLC ratio: best strategy to evaluate multiple myeloma in patients with chronic kidney disease.
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Molina-Andújar A, Robles P, Cibeira MT, Montagud-Marrahi E, Guillen E, Xipell M, Blasco M, Poch E, Rosiñol L, Bladé J, and Quintana LF
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- Area Under Curve, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reference Values, Sensitivity and Specificity, Severity of Illness Index, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Immunoglobulin kappa-Chains blood, Immunoglobulin lambda-Chains blood, Multiple Myeloma blood, Multiple Myeloma complications, Multiple Myeloma diagnosis, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic blood, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic complications, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: Monoclonal serum free light chains (sFLC) are a well-known cause of renal impairment (RI) in patients with multiple myeloma (MM). As an indicator of monoclonality, sFLC ratio has acquired a key role in the diagnosis and monitorization of the disease. However, its interpretation is altered in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). This study aims to evaluate the modification of the sFLC ratio reference range in patients with CKD, and propose an optimal range for patients with CKD., Methods: Serum FLC κ/λ ratio and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) were retrospectively analyzed in 113 control patients (without hematologic disease), 63 patients with MM in complete remission and 347 patients with active MM. The three groups included patients with CKD (eGFR < 90)., Results: In the group of patients without active MM (n = 176), the sFLC ratio increased at different stages of CKD without pathological significance, with an increase in the number of false positives specially when eGFR is ≤55 ml/min. An optimal range was established for patients with eGFR ≤55 ml/min/1.73 m2: 0.82-3,6 with maximum sensitivity + specificity for that group with an improvement in the Area under the curve (AUC), 0.91 (0.84-0.97) compared with the current ranges proposed by Katzmann and Hutchinson., Conclusions: This study confirms the influence of eGFR on the interpretation of the sFLC ratio, showing a decreasing specificity in progressive CKD stages when using the reference sFLC range (Katzmann), especially in patients with eFGR ≤55. According to our results, we suggest a modified optimal range (0.82-3,6) for eGFR ≤55 ml/min/1.73 m2. It is necessary to validate this modified range in larger and prospective studies.
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- 2020
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47. Outcomes of pancreas transplantation in older diabetic patients.
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Montagud-Marrahi E, Molina-Andújar A, Pané A, Ramírez-Bajo MJ, Amor A, Esmatjes E, Ferrer J, Musquera M, Diekmann F, and Ventura-Aguiar P
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- Adult, Age Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 complications, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 complications, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 epidemiology, Female, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 surgery, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 surgery, Pancreas Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Objective: Improvement in insulin alternatives is leading to a delayed presentation of microvascular and macrovascular complications of diabetes. The objective of this study was to evaluate the long-term outcomes of older (≥50 years) diabetic patients who receive a pancreas transplantation (PT)., Research Design and Methods: We retrospectively evaluated all 338 PTs performed at our center between 2000 and 2016 (mean follow-up 9.4±4.9 years). Recipient and graft survivals were estimated for up to 10 years after PT. Major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) before and after PT were included in the analysis., Results: Thirty-nine patients (12%) were ≥50 years old (52.7±2.3 years) at the day of PT, of which 29 received a simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation (SPK) and 10 a pancreas after kidney transplantation (PAK). SPK recipients were first transplants, whereas in the PAK up to 50% were pancreas re-transplantations. Recipient and pancreas graft survivals at 10 years were similar between the group <50 years old and the older group for both SPK and PAK (log-rank p>0.05). The prevalence of MACE prior to PT was similar between both groups (31% vs 29%). Following PT, older recipients presented inferior post-transplant MACE-free survival. In a multivariate regression model, diabetes vintage (HR 1.054, p=0.03) and pre-transplantation MACE (HR 1.98, p=0.011), but not recipient age (HR 1.45, p=0.339), were associated with post-transplant MACE., Conclusions: Long-term survival of older pancreas transplant recipients are similar to younger counterparts. Diabetes vintage, but not age, increased the risk of post-transplantation MACE. These results suggest pancreas transplantation is a valuable treatment alternative to older diabetic patients., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2020
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48. Evaluation of the influence of the surface membrane and blood flow in medium «cut-off» (MCO) dialyzers.
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Maduell F, Rodas L, Broseta JJ, Gómez M, Montagud-Marrahi E, Guillén E, Hermida E, Xipell M, Arias-Guillén M, Vera M, Fontseré N, and Rico N
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Surface Properties, Membranes, Artificial, Regional Blood Flow, Renal Dialysis instrumentation
- Abstract
Introduction: Recently, a new class of dialyzers, medium cut-off membranes (MCO), designed to improve the permeability, which could provide an efficacy similar to hemodiafiltration, have been incorporated into our therapeutic possibilities. To increase the knowledge about its use, the objective of the study was to evaluate the effect of the surface and blood flow (Qb) on the depurative efficacy in the MCO membranes., Material and Methods: We included 19 patients in the hemodialysis. Each patient received 6 sessions, in which the membrane surface was varied, from 1.7 to 2.0 m
2 , and/or the Qb (300, 350, 400 or 450mL/min). In each session, different solutes were determined at the beginning and end of dialysis., Results: The surface change of the dialyzer did not show significant differences in the removal of small or large molecules, without changes in albumin loss. The increase in Qb was accompanied by an increase in clearance of small molecules, without showing differences in the percentage reduction of β2 -microglobulin, myoglobin, prolactin, α1 -microglobulin and α1 -acid glycoprotein, except for some comparison with Qb 450mL/min. There were also no differences in the loss of albumin in the dialysis fluid, less than 2.5 g in all situations., Conclusion: The increase of the surface area from 1.7 to 2.0 m2 in the MCO dialyzer has not meant a greater depurative effectiveness. In these dialyzers the increase of Qb does not seem to be as determinant as in hemodiafiltration except for the clearance of small molecules., (Copyright © 2019 Sociedad Española de Nefrología. Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2019
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49. High-permeability alternatives to current dialyzers performing both high-flux hemodialysis and postdilution online hemodiafiltration.
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Maduell F, Rodas L, Broseta JJ, Gómez M, Xipell Font M, Molina A, Montagud-Marrahi E, Guillén E, Arias-Guillén M, Fontseré N, Vera Rivera M, and Rico N
- Subjects
- Aged, Alpha-Globulins isolation & purification, Dialysis Solutions therapeutic use, Female, Hemodiafiltration adverse effects, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Myoglobin isolation & purification, Permeability, Prolactin isolation & purification, Prospective Studies, Renal Dialysis adverse effects, Renal Dialysis instrumentation, Serum Albumin isolation & purification, Urea isolation & purification, beta 2-Microglobulin isolation & purification, Hemodiafiltration instrumentation, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy
- Abstract
Most high-flux dialyzers can be used in both hemodialysis (HD) and online hemodiafiltration (OL-HDF). However, some of these dialyzers have higher permeability and should not be prescribed for OL-HDF to avoid high albumin losses. The aim of this study was to compare the safety and efficacy of a currently used dialyzer in HD and OL-HDF with those of several other high permeability dialyzers which should only be used in HD. A prospective, single-center study was carried out in 21 patients. Each patient underwent 5 dialysis sessions with routine dialysis parameters: 2 sessions with Helixone (HD and postdilution OL-HDF) and 1 session each with steam sterilized polyphenylene, polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA), and medium cut-off (MCO) dialyzers in HD treatment. The removal ratios (RR) of urea, creatinine, ß
2 -microglobulin, myoglobin, prolactin, α1 -microglobulin, α1 -acid glycoprotein, and albumin were compared intraindividually. A proportional part of the dialysate was collected to quantify the loss of various solutes, including albumin. Urea and creatinine RRs with the Helixone-HDF and MCO dialyzers were higher than with the other 3 dialyzers in HD. The β2 -microglobulin, myoglobin and prolactin RRs with Helixone-HDF treatment were significantly higher than those obtained with all 4 dialyzers in HD treatment. The β2 -microglobulin value obtained with the MCO dialyzer was also higher than that obtained with the other 3 dialyzers in HD treatment. The myoglobin RR with MCO was higher than those obtained with Helixone and PMMA in HD treatment. The prolactin RR with Helixone-HD was significantly lower than those obtained in the other 4 study sessions. The α1 -microglobulin and α1 - acid glycoprotein RRs with Helixone-HDF were significantly higher than those obtained with Helixone and PMMA in HD treatment. The albumin loss varied from 0.54 g with Helixone-HD to 3.3 g with polyphenylene. The global removal score values ((UreaRR + β2 -microglobulinRR + myoglobinRR + prolactinRR + α1 -microglobulinRR + α1 -acid glycoproteinRR - albuminRR )/6) were 43.7% with Helixone-HD, 47.7% with PMMA, 54% with polyphenylene, 54.8% with MCO and 59.6% with Helixone-HDF, with significant differences. In conclusion, this study confirms the superiority of OL-HDF over HD with the high-flux dialyzers that allow both treatments. Although new dialyzers with high permeability can only be used in HD, they are in an intermediate position and some are very close to OL-HDF., (© 2019 International Center for Artificial Organs and Transplantation and Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)- Published
- 2019
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50. Improved Control of Secondary Hyperparathyroidism in Hemodialysis Patients Switching from Oral Cinacalcet to Intravenous Etelcalcetide, Especially in Nonadherent Patients.
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Xipell M, Montagud-Marrahi E, Rubio MV, Ojeda R, Arias-Guillén M, Fontseré N, Rodas L, Vera M, Broseta JJ, Torregrosa V, Filella X, and Maduell F
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- Administration, Intravenous, Administration, Oral, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Calcium blood, Calcium-Regulating Hormones and Agents administration & dosage, Cinacalcet administration & dosage, Female, Humans, Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary blood, Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary therapy, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Compliance, Peptides administration & dosage, Prospective Studies, Renal Dialysis, Young Adult, Calcium-Regulating Hormones and Agents therapeutic use, Cinacalcet therapeutic use, Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary drug therapy, Peptides therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: Etelcalcetide is a novel second-generation calcimimetic that, because of its intravenous administration, could improve treatment adherence in secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT). The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of etelcalcetide compared with that of cinacalcet in controlling SHPT in patients under hemodialysis., Methods: A prospective observational study was performed in 29 patients with SHPT under hemodialysis who switched from cinacalcet to etelcalcetide with a follow-up of 6 months. A survey was conducted of adherence to the oral calcimimetic. The primary end-point of the study was to assess whether etelcalcetide was more effective than cinacalcet in controlling SHPT., Results: After the switch of treatment, none of the patients developed clinical intolerance or new adverse effects. Etelcalcetide was more effective than cinacalcet in controlling intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH), with an overall decrease in iPTH levels that was significant from the second month. Average calcium levels remained within the normal range, with a higher percentage of hypocalcemia with etelcalcetide (6.9 vs. 13.8%), which was asymptomatic in all cases. Patients who were nonadherent to cinacalcet (38%) showed a significant reduction in calcium and iPTH during follow-up with etelcalcetide. The adherent group (62%) also showed a trend to lower iPTH levels reaching statistical significance after 5 months of follow-up. The dose conversion factor for the switch from cinacalcet to etelcalcetide was etelcalcetide/session = 0.111*mg cinacalcet/day + 0.96, R2 = 0.57., Conclusions: Etelcalcetide was more effective than cinacalcet in this patient population, especially in the nonadherent subgroup, leading to better SHPT control without adverse effects., (© 2019 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
- Published
- 2019
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