Despite continued improvement in incidence of acute immune injury and short-term graft survival, late allograft dysfunction remains a significant problem in the renal transplant population. Recent reports suggest that rates of renal function decline are quite varied in the overall recipient population, and that individual rates for many recipients may not change substantially over time. Moreover, analyses also reveal distinct predictive factors for both early and late functional decline. Long-term outcome studies for renal transplantation, however, might be significantly limited by incomplete data sets for assessing clinical endpoints. In view of the heterogeneous factors that may cause progressive allograft injury, more routine biopsy sampling would allow a more complete characterization of induced injuries. Elucidating mechanisms of renal fibrosis in response to injury, in experimental systems and humans, is also an important goal in better understanding chronic allograft damage. Regulation of cell senescence genes and epithelial to mesenchymal transition, studied in other models of renal fibrosis, are likely relevant to studies of renal allograft dysfunction. Recent technical advances in analyzing biological samples may play a pivotal role in identifying and validating surrogate markers of allograft function for future interventional trials in transplantation. Copyright © Blackwell Munksgaard 2005.
CITATION STYLE
Meyers, C. M., & Kirk, A. D. (2005). Workshop on late renal allograft dysfunction. In American Journal of Transplantation (Vol. 5, pp. 1600–1605). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-6143.2005.00926.x
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