BackgroundNew-onset diabetes after transplantation (NODAT) is a significant co-morbidity following kidney transplantation. Lower post-transplant serum magnesium levels have been found to be an independent risk factor for NODAT in adult kidney transplant recipients.MethodsWe undertook a retrospective analysis of risk factors for NODAT in pediatric renal transplant recipients at our institution with the aim of determining if hypomagnesemia confers a significant risk of developing NODAT in this patient population.ResultsA total of 173 children with a median age at transplantation of 7.0 (range 1.3–17.5) years were included. Hypomagnesemia was found to be a significant independent risk factor for NODAT (p = 0.01). High trough tacrolimus levels were also independently associated with NODAT (p < 0.001). There was no significant association between NODAT and body mass index at the time of transplantation, monthly cumulative steroid dose or post-transplant cytomegalovirus viremia (p = 0.9, 0.6 and 0.7, respectively).ConclusionsThis study identifies hypomagnesemia as a significant independent risk factor for the development of NODAT in pediatric renal transplant recipients. Given the clear association between hypomagnesemia and NODAT in both adults and children following renal transplantation, further studies are merited to clarify the etiology of this association and to examine the effect of magnesium supplementation on NODAT.
The last sentence of the second paragraph of the Results section should read: Fourteen patients developed NODAT between 8 and 30 days post transplantation, five of whom required insulin therapy for > 12 months.
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