Recurrent focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS)following transplantation is ascribed to the presence of a circulating FSGS permeability factor (FSPF). Plasmapheresis (PP) can induce remission of proteinuria in recurrent FSGS. This study addressed the efficacy of pre-transplant PP in decreasing the incidence of recurrence in high-risk patients. Ten patients at highrisk for FSGS recurrence because of rapid progression to renal failure (n = 4) or prior transplant recurrence of FSGS (n = 6) underwent a course of 8 PP treatments in the peri-operative period. Recurrences were identified by proteinuria >3 g/day and confirmed by biopsy. Seven patients, including all 4 with first grafts and 3 of 6 with prior recurrence, were free of recurrence at follow-up (238-1258 days). Final serum creatinine in 8 patients with functioning kidneys averaged 1.53 mg/dL. FSGS recurred within 3 months in 3 patients, each of whom had lost prior transplants to recurrent FSGS. Two of these progressed to end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and the third has significant renal dysfunction. Based on inclusion criteria, recurrence rates of 60% were expected if no treatment was given. Therefore, PP may decrease the incidence of recurrent FSGS in high-risk patients. Definitive conclusions regarding optimal management can only be drawn from larger, randomized, controlled studies.
Kidney transplantation from live donors achieves an excellent outcome regardless of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) mismatch. This development has expanded the opportunity of kidney transplantation from unrelated live donors. Nevertheless, the hazard of hyperacute rejection has usually precluded the transplantation of a kidney from a live donor to a potential recipient who is incompatible by ABO blood type or HLA antibody crossmatch reactivity. Region 1 of the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) has devised an alternative system of kidney transplantation that would enable either a simultaneous exchange between live donors (a paired exchange), or a live donor/deceased donor exchange to incompatible recipients who are waiting on the list (a live donor/list exchange). This Regional system of exchange has derived the benefit of live donation, avoided the risk of ABO or crossmatch incompatibility, and yielded an additional donor source for patients awaiting a deceased donor kidney. Despite the initial disadvantage to the list of patients awaiting an O blood type kidney, as every paired exchange transplant removes a patient from the waiting list, it also avoids the incompatible recipient from eventually having to go on the list. Thus, this approach also increases access to deceased donor kidneys for the remaining candidates on the list.
The transplant patient's therapeutic regimen consists of a lifelong drug therapy, including immunosuppressive drugs, prophylactic antimicrobials and often medications for the treatment of hypertension, diabetes mellitus and other comorbid diseases. Regular clinic appointments are required to monitor for signs and symptoms of immunological injury, recurrent disease and adverse drug effects. Patients are instructed to avoid risk factors for cardiovascular disease and cancer (e.g. diet, exercise, sun protection and not smoking). Noncompliance with all aspects of this regimen is substantial. Medication noncompliance leads to an increased incidence of acute rejection, chronic rejection and graft loss. Undoubtedly, many practitioners fail to appreciate the extent of noncompliance as the signs are often subtle and most patients are unwilling to disclose deliberate or widespread disregard for medication use. Newer immunosuppressive agents, particularly once-daily medications and long-acting antibody preparations offer convenience and monitoring that may improve compliance. This review focuses on the prevalence, correlates and consequences of medication nonadherence after organ transplantation. Current recommendations to enhance adherence are discussed.
Overall, findings indicate that carefully screened ADs experience psychosocial and functional outcomes comparable with those of TDs and should not be systematically excluded from the opportunity to donate.
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