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The role of donor hypertension and angiotensin II in the occurrence of early pancreas allograft thrombosis

Authors :
Christophe Masset
Julien Branchereau
Fanny Buron
Georges Karam
Maud Rabeyrin
Karine Renaudin
Florent Le Borgne
Lionel Badet
Xavier Matillon
Christophe Legendre
Denis Glotz
Corinne Antoine
Magali Giral
Jacques Dantal
Diego Cantarovich
DIVAT Consortium
Maria Brunet
Rémi Cahen
Ricardo Codas
Sameh Daoud
Valérie Dubois
Coralie Fournie
Arnaud Grégoire
Alice Koenig
Charlène Lévi
Emmanuel Morelon
Claire Pouteil-Noble
Thomas Rimmelé
Olivier Thaunat
Gilles Blancho
Agnès Chapelet
Clément Deltombe
Lucile Figueres
Raphael Gaisne
Claire Garandeau
Caroline Gourraud-Vercel
Maryvonne Hourmant
Clarisse Kerleau
Delphine Kervella
Aurélie Meurette
Simon Ville
Christine Kandell
Anne Moreau
Florent Delbos
Alexandre Walencik
Anne Devis
Lucile Amrouche
Dany Anglicheau
Olivier Aubert
Lynda Bererhi
Alexandre Loupy
Frank Martinez
Arnaud Méjean
Rébecca Sberro-Soussan
Anne Scemla
Marc-Olivier Timsit
Julien Zuber
Gillian Divard
Carmen Lefaucheur
Source :
Frontiers in Immunology, Vol 15 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2024.

Abstract

BackgroundAbout 10–20% of pancreas allografts are still lost in the early postoperative period despite the identification of numerous detrimental risk factors that correlate with graft thrombosis.MethodsWe conducted a multicenter study including 899 pancreas transplant recipients between 2000 and 2018. Early pancreas failure due to complete thrombosis, long-term pancreas, kidney and patient survivals were analyzed and adjusted to donor, recipient and perioperative variables using a multivariate cause-specific Cox model stratified to transplant centers.ResultsPancreas from donors with history of hypertension (6.7%), as well as with high body mass index (BMI), were independently associated with an increased risk of pancreas failure within the first 30 post-operative days (respectively, HR= 2.57, 95% CI from 1.35 to 4.89 and HR= 1.11, 95% CI from 1.04 to 1.19). Interaction term between hypertension and BMI was negative. Donor hypertension also impacted long-term pancreas survival (HR= 1.88, 95% CI from 1.13 to 3.12). However, when pancreas survival was calculated after the postoperative day 30, donor hypertension was no longer a significant risk factor (HR= 1.22, 95% CI from 0.47 to 3.15). A lower pancreas survival was observed in patients receiving a pancreas from a hypertensive donor without RAAS (Renin Angiotensin Aldosterone System) blockers compared to others (50% vs 14%, p < 0.001). Pancreas survival was similar among non-hypertensive donors and hypertensive ones under RAAS blockers.ConclusionDonor hypertension was a significant and independent risk factor of pancreas failure. The well-known pathogenic role of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system seems to be involved in the genesis of this immediate graft failure.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16643224
Volume :
15
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3afeecc6b7ec4cea91d80c60095646b4
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2024.1359381