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Natural history of cadaveric kidney transplants in the absence of early acute rejection

Authors :
M. Fotino
Jhoong S. Cheigh
William T. Stubenbord
Kurt H. Stenzel
Robert R. Riggio
Manikkam Suthanthiran
Stuart D. Saal
Albert L. Rubin
Source :
Nephron. 35(1)
Publication Year :
1983

Abstract

The foremost goal in organ transplantation is to achieve normal graft function without rejection. 31 (8.7%) of 357 cadaveric kidney transplant had no evidence of rejection for the first 3 months. Among these, 2 patients died with a functioning graft and four grafts failed during the 1- to 7-year follow-up period. Actuarial graft survival rates of these patients were 96.8 and 79.0% at 2 and 5 years, respectively, as compared with 64.6 and 51.2%, respectively, for the controls (p less than 0.01). Multiple preoperative blood transfusions and the adjunctive immunosuppressive therapy with retroplacental gamma globulin appeared to be playing a role for the induction of the 'no-rejection' state. However, continuous immunosuppressive therapy is necessary to maintain graft function.

Details

ISSN :
16608151
Volume :
35
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nephron
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a66ac3e96949b326d34ff7925956ab14