New-Onset Diabetes as a Complication After Kidney Transplant: Incidence and Outcomes.

Autor: Ouni A; From the Department of Nephrology, Sahloul Hospital, Sousse, Tunisia., Sahtout W, Hadj Brahim M, Azzabi A, Aicha NB, Mrabet S, Fradi A, Zallema D, Guedri Y, Achour A
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Experimental and clinical transplantation : official journal of the Middle East Society for Organ Transplantation [Exp Clin Transplant] 2022 Mar; Vol. 20 (Suppl 1), pp. 129-131.
DOI: 10.6002/ect.MESOT2021.P56
Abstrakt: Objectives: Diabetes after kidney transplant is a common complication. It may increase the risk of cardiovascular disease and mortality after kidney transplant. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of diabetes that developed after transplant on outcomes in kidney transplant recipients.
Materials and Methods: This study included renal allograft recipients without diabetes who received transplants from 2008 to 2019 in our Department of Nephrology at Sahloul Hospital (Tunisia). Demographic and clinical data at transplant time and clinical events during the study period were collected. Patient and graft survival rates were analyzed. Patients with and without diabetes after transplant were compared.
Results: In the 257 patients (median age of 36 years) included in our study, the overall incidence of diabetes after transplant was 21.8%. Laboratory data (serum cholesterol, serum creatinine at discharge, and 24-hour proteinuria) were similar in those with and without diabetes after transplant. We observed no significant differences in cardiovascular diseases and infectious complication rates between patients with and without diabetes after transplant. There was also no significant difference in graft loss at 5 years between those with and without diabetes after transplant (P = .582). The 5-year patient survival rate in kidney transplant recipients with diabetes after transplant was 87.5%. There was no significant difference in death rate between those with and without diabetes after transplant (P = .566).
Conclusions: Diabetes after transplant affected graft and patient survival and increased the incidence of posttransplant cardiovascular disease. The incidence and impact of diabetes after transplant can be minimized through pre- and posttransplant screening to identify patients at higher risk.
Databáze: MEDLINE