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Impact of native nephrectomy on hypertension outcomes in pediatric kidney transplant recipients: a 10-year institutional experience

articles · StayCurrentMD · Apr 01, 2022

Abstract

Objective

To assess the role native nephrectomy (NN) in hypertension-related outcomes for pediatric patients undergoing renal transplantation (RT).

Methods

Renal transplants (RT) performed at our institution between 2006 and 2015 were reviewed. RT recipients who underwent NN were compared to those who did not. Primary outcomes were hypertension-related: use/number of medications pre-/post-transplant and hypertension-related readmissions. Secondary outcomes were 1-year outcomes of: readmissions, eGFR, Clavien–Dindo classification ≥ 3 complications, and graft loss.

Results

135 patients were evaluated. 24 underwent NN (Group 1) and 111 did not (Group 2). Baseline characteristics were similar between Groups 1 and 2. The majority of NN indications were hypertension (10/39 kidneys) and proteinuria (12/39 kidneys). There were no differences in use/number of anti-hypertensive medications pre- or post-transplant. However, between Group 2 and subgroup of patients who underwent NN for hypertension, a significant difference was seen in medication use/numbers but not post-transplant. Number of readmissions due to hypertension was similar (7.2% vs. 12.5%). The only difference in secondary outcomes was higher readmission rates with bacterial infections for group 1 (45.8% vs. 23.4%, p = 0.041).

Conclusion

NN, when offered to patients at higher risk of post-RT hypertension, may allow high-risk patients to achieve similar hypertension outcomes as those at lower risk.

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