After the first two years of renal replacement therapy, transplantation demonstrates lower costs to the system when compared to other modalities evaluated. Based on that, this therapy justifies improvements in government policies in this sector.
There are striking differences in chronic kidney disease between Caucasians and African descendants. It was widely accepted that this occurred due to socioeconomic factors, but recent studies show that apolipoprotein L-1 (APOL1) gene variants are strongly associated with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, HIV-associated nephropathy, hypertensive nephrosclerosis, and lupus nephritis in the African American population. These variants made their way to South America trough intercontinental slave traffic and conferred an evolutionary advantage to the carries by protecting against forms of trypanosomiasis, but at the expense of an increased risk of kidney disease. The effect of the variants does not seem to be related to their serum concentration, but rather to local action on the podocytes. Risk variants are also important in renal transplantation, since grafts from donors with risk variants present worse survival.
Introduction Coding variants in apolipoprotein L-1 (APOL1) are associated with an increased risk of end-stage kidney disease (ESRD) in African American individuals under a recessive model of inheritance. The effect of the APOL1 risk alleles on kidney disease has been observed in studies in African American and African populations. Despite the 130 million individuals of recent African ancestry in South America, the impact of APOL1 has not been explored. Methods In this case-control study, we tested APOL1 genotype in 106 Brazilian HD (hemodialysis) patients with African ancestry and compared risk allele frequency with 106 healthy first-degree relatives. The association of risk alleles and ESRD was calculated with a linear mixed model and was adjusted for relatedness and additional confounders. In a broader survey, the age of dialysis initiation and APOL1 variants were analyzed in 274 HD patients. Results Two APOL1 risk alleles were 10 times more common in patients with ESRD than in controls (9.4% vs. 0.9%; odds ratio [OR]: 10.95, SE = 1.49, P = 0.0017). Carriers of 2 risk alleles initiated dialysis 12 years earlier than patients with zero risk alleles. Conclusion The APOL1 risk variants were less frequent in dialysis patients of African ancestry in Brazil than in the United States. Nonetheless, carriers of 2 risk variants had 10-fold higher odds of ESRD. Age of dialysis initiation was markedly lower in 2-risk allele carriers, suggesting a more aggressive disease phenotype. The Brazilian population represents an opportunity to identify different sets of genetic modifiers or environmental triggers that might be present in more extensively studied populations.
To increase the number of kidneys available for transplantation, it is reasonable to use a pelvic kidney, after a thorough investigation.
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