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Current Safety of Renal Allograft Biopsy With Indication in Adult Recipients

Authors :
Shih-Ting Huang
Jun-Li Tsai
Cheng-Hsu Chen
Shang-Feng Tsai
Kuo-Hsiung Shu
Ming-Ju Wu
Ya-Wen Chuang
Tung-Min Yu
Chi-Hung Cheng
Source :
Medicine. 95:e2816
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2016.

Abstract

Renal biopsy remains the golden standard diagnosis of renal function deterioration. The safety in native kidney biopsy is well defined. However, it is a different story in allograft kidney biopsy. We conduct this retrospective study to clarify the safety of allograft kidney biopsy with indication.All variables were grouped by the year of biopsy and they were compared by Mann-Whitney U test (for continuous variables) or Chi-square test (for categorical variables). We collected possible factors associated with complications, including age, gender, body weight, renal function, cause of uremia, status of coagulation, hepatitis, size of needle, and immunosuppressants.We recruited all renal transplant recipients undergoing allograft biopsy between January of 2009 and December of 2014. This is the largest database for allograft kidney biopsy with indication. Of all the 269 biopsies, there was no difference in occurrence among the total 14 complications (5.2%) over these 6 years. There were only 3 cases of hematomas (1.11%), 6 gross hematuria (2.23%), 1 hydronephrosis (0.37%), and 2 hemoglobin decline (0.74%). The outcome of this cohort is the best compared to all other studies, and it is even better than the allograft protocol kidney biopsy. Among all possible factors, patients with pathological report containing "medullary tissue only" were susceptible to complications (P

Details

ISSN :
00257974
Volume :
95
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5630ce01a74d5bb245c55e1382f4b386
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/md.0000000000002816