Modification in induction immunosuppression regimens to safely perform kidney transplants amid the COVID-19 pandemic: A single-center retrospective study

3Citations
Citations of this article
25Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has negatively impacted organ donation and transplantation across the globe. Methods: This study analyzed transplant outcomes during the pre-pandemic [PPE, 1/2019–2/2020] and pandemic era [PE, 3/2020–8/2020] based on changes in induction immunosuppression. During PPE, high immunological risk patients received 4–6 mg/kg, moderate risk 2–4 mg/kg, and low risk 1–2 mg/kg of ATG. During PE, ATG doses were reduced to 3–4 mg/kg for high risk, 1–2 mg/kg for moderate, and low changed to basiliximab. Primary outcomes are as follows: biopsy-proven rejection [BPAR], de-novo donor-specific antibody [DSA], delayed graft function [DGF], infection rates, graft loss, and all-cause of mortality. Results: During PPE, 224 kidney transplants [KTx] and 14 kidney/pancreas transplants [KP] were included, while 180 KTx and 5 KP were included for PE. Basiliximab use increased by 30% in the PE. The odds of DGF were statistically significant between PE vs PPE, OR 1.7 [1.05, 2.8, p-value =.042]. The odds of developing DSAs and BPAR during the PE vs. PPE were 0.34 [0.16, 0.71, p-value =.004] and OR 0.34 (0.1 to 1.1, p-value,.104)], respectively. Cytomegalovirus [19% in PE, 37% in PPE] and BK virus [5.4% PE vs. 16% PPE] incidence reduced during PE vs. PPE. COVID-19, graft loss, and mortality were comparable between groups. Conclusion: KTx and KP transplants were performed safely during the COVID-19 pandemic with a reduction of induction immunosuppression.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Von Stein, L., Witkowsky, O., Samidurai, L., Doraiswamy, M. K., Flores, K., Pesavento, T. E., & Singh, P. (2021). Modification in induction immunosuppression regimens to safely perform kidney transplants amid the COVID-19 pandemic: A single-center retrospective study. Clinical Transplantation, 35(8). https://doi.org/10.1111/ctr.14365

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free