Abstract: Use of kidneys from pediatric donors has been associated with worse outcome. We review our 20‐yr experience using pediatric kidneys as single grafts in children and adult recipients. Charts review of 29 recipients, transplanted between 1986 and 2005, who received a graft from a donor ≤6 yr was performed. One recipient received “en bloc” graft and the remaining patients received a single kidney. Nine recipients were adults and 21 were children. Creatinine at discharge and at follow‐up was recorded and actuarial graft and patient survivals were calculated using life table analysis. All 29 recipients are alive at mean follow‐up of 92 months. Five grafts were lost for: primary non‐function (1), recurrent FSGS at 14 month (1) and chronic rejection (3). All five recipients who lost their graft received a graft from donors ≤3 yr. Mean calculated GFR (Schwartz formula) at one and five yr were 84.2 mL/m 2 /1.73 and 98.3 mL/m 2 /1.73, respectively. Actuarial graft survival was 93.2%, 89.6%, and 81.9% at one, five and at 10 yr after transplant. The use of a single kidney graft from pediatric donors yields good long‐term results. Kidneys from small pediatric donors should be allocated first to matched‐weight recipients but otherwise can be transplanted in older children or in adults.
The appropriate use of liver transplantation in children with type-1 primary hyperoxaluria (PH-1) is not well established. We reviewed our experience with 36 children with PH-1, including 12 who underwent liver transplantation.From 1989-1998, 36 children from 10 families in northern Israel were diagnosed with PH-1. Eight children presented with renal failure; seven of these eight had the severe infantile form of the disease. One child was treated with kidney transplantation alone. Combined liver-kidney transplantation has been performed in nine children and preemptive liver transplantation in three children. A review of the patients' charts for the following parameters was performed: age, clinical signs, and renal sonographic findings at diagnosis, age at onset of dialysis, and current status. Type of transplant, pre- and posttransplant urine oxalate excretion, current renal function, survival, and complications were recorded in liver recipients.Of the 23 nontransplanted children, 9 died of complications related to severe systemic oxalosis and 14 are alive (mean follow-up, 7.4 years), including 2 who are candidates for transplantation. The child who underwent only kidney transplantation died of unrelated causes. Of the 12 liver recipients, 2 died within the first 3 months posttransplant and another child underwent retransplantation due to hepatic arterial thrombosis. At intervals after transplant ranging from 6-54 months, 10 recipients are alive (7 of the 9 recipients of combined liver-kidney transplants and all 3 recipients of preemptive liver transplants). Mean GFR in the 10 survivors is 77 ml/min/m2. In 9 of these 10, daily urinary oxalate excretion normalized. Renal function has improved (mean GFR 86 vs. 58 ml/min/m2) but renal oxalate deposits remain in the three recipients of isolated liver grafts.Our decade-long experience with children with PH-1 supports strategies for early diagnosis and timely liver transplantation. Preemptive isolated liver transplantation should be considered in children who develop the disease during infancy or in those with slowly progressive disease when significant symptoms develop. Combined liver-kidney transplantation is suggested for children with end-stage renal disease.
Recurrent hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is particularly aggressive in the post-liver transplantation setting, with rapid progression of liver fibrosis. Biliary complications remain a significant cause of morbidity following liver transplantation. Post-cholecystectomy biliary strictures are associated with advanced hepatic fibrosis. The aim of this retrospective study was to determine whether the presence of biliary complications affects survival in liver transplant recipients with recurrent HCV disease. The files of liver transplant recipients (53.7% male; mean age 52.7+/-10.3 yr) were reviewed for incidence, type and treatment of biliary complications, and findings were compared between those who developed recurrent HCV disease (n=47, 83.9%) and those who did not (n=9). Twenty-one biliary complications developed in 12 patients with recurrent HCV (25.5%). Treatment with endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography or percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography with balloon dilatation and stent placement or surgical revision was successful in nine (75%). Three biliary complications developed in three patients with no recurrence (p=NS). There was no statistically significant association between recurrent HCV disease and biliary complications. However, among those with recurrent disease, the recurrence was severe in nine of 12 recipients with biliary complications (75%) but in only nine of 35 without biliary complications (26%) (p=0.001). Death was documented in eight patients with severe recurrence (44.4%), including three (37.5%) with biliary complications and two (7%) with non-severe recurrence, neither of whom had biliary complications (p=0.003). Antiviral treatment was successful in nine of 25 patients (36%) who received it. On multivariate analysis, biliary complications were a significant predictor of severe recurrence (OR 27.0, 95% confidence interval 2.07-351.4) (p=0.012). Fibrosis stage in the second biopsy was significantly correlated with serum alanine aminotransferase (p=0.01) and with duration of biliary obstruction (p=0.07). In conclusion, biliary complications of liver transplantation strongly affect outcome in patients with recurrent HCV disease despite attempts to relieve the biliary obstruction and to treat the recurrent HCV disease.