Many transplant recipients face serious kidney-failure risk
As if the ordeal of waiting for, receiving and living with
an organ transplant weren’t enough, a new study finds that people who get a
second chance at life from new hearts, lungs, livers or intestines are very
likely to have their lives cut short by failing kidneys – caused, in part,
by medications given to transplant patients.
In fact, 16.5% of all non-kidney transplant recipients
develop chronic kidney failure, and almost a third of those patients go on
to develop full-blown End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD), according to new data
published in the New England Journal of Medicine by researchers from
the University of Michigan Health System.
And those whose kidneys begin to fail after their
transplant face a much larger risk of dying than those whose kidneys stay
healthy, the study finds. Only a second transplant — to put in a new kidney
— mitigates the fatal consequences of ESRD.
The researchers weren’t able to pinpoint the exact causes
of the kidney failure seen in the study of 69,321 people who received
transplants of any solid organ except kidney or pancreas between 1990 and
2000. But in the largest-ever study of its kind, they identified several
factors that put patients at a higher risk of kidney failure and death:
older age; being a woman; pre-transplant hepatitis C infection, high blood
pressure or diabetes; and kidney problems before or immediately after
transplant.
They also know that some kidney damage is caused by the
very drugs that all transplant recipients take to prevent their bodies from
rejecting their new organs.
"We can see now how large the problem is, what the risk
factors are, and what the implications and costs might be for the dialysis
and transplant systems," said Akinlolu Ojo, M.D., Ph.D., the associate
professor of nephrology at the U-M Medical School who led the study. "We can
also see that damage caused by anti-rejection drugs is one of the reasons
for this effect, but not the only reason."
In the lead editorial that accompanies the paper, two
Harvard University transplant experts call the findings "cause for concern."
The U-M team and editorialists both say the results have implications for
counseling given to patients awaiting a transplant, the design of
less-damaging anti-rejection treatment regimens, and the decision of when to
place transplant recipients with failing kidneys on the kidney transplant
list.
Besides the overall incidence of kidney failure, which
increased steadily as time went on and led to an escalating rate of ESRD and
a 4.5-times-greater overall death risk, the researchers found many other
trends that may be significant for pre- and post-transplant treatment.
For example, the risk of developing chronic kidney failure
varied greatly depending on the type of organ received. Only 6.8 percent of
heart transplant patients had developed kidney failure by the third
anniversary of their transplant, as compared with 10% of lung recipients,
13.9% of liver recipients and 14.2% of intestine recipients. By the fifth
year, nearly 11% of heart recipients had failing kidneys, as opposed to
nearly 15% of lung recipients, 18% of liver recipients and 21.3% of
intestine recipients.
The researchers were able to obtain data on use of
anti-rejection drugs in the immediate post-transplant period for nearly all
the patients in the study. Because almost all transplant recipients in the
1990s took one of three such drugs — cyclosporine, tacrolimus or sirolimus —
it was impossible to tell exactly how much they may have contributed to an
individual’s kidney failure.
The only statistically significant finding related to
anti-rejection drugs was that the excess risk of developing chronic kidney
failure was greater among liver transplant recipients who took cyclosporine
than among those who took tacrolimus. Sirolimus was introduced toward the
end of the study period; only one percent of patients in the study took it,
so comparisons with other drugs did not produce statistically significant
findings.
Both the researchers and the editorialists call for
further studies of the outcomes for patients taking these three drugs, and
newer regimens with less-toxic medications.
The findings regarding kidney transplant for patients
whose kidneys entered end-stage failure were interesting, says Ojo, who
treats many kidney transplant candidates and recipients.
"For years, we had been finding that non-kidney transplant
patients had been coming back to clinic in need of dialysis or a kidney
transplant," he notes. "These data show that each year, one percent of all
the transplant patients who had chronic kidney failure progressed to
end-stage renal disease, and that those patients who received a kidney
transplant soon after this progression had a lower overall death risk than
those who received dialysis."
The cost of dialysis and transplants for these
second-time-around transplant candidates could add millions to the already
costly Medicare system that insures kidney failure patients. Already, the
nation’s 300,000 ESRD patients make up only 0.8 percent of Medicare
recipients, but account for six percent of all Medicare costs — more than
$13 billion annually.
SOURCES: "Chronic Renal
Failure after Transplantation of a Nonrenal Organ," by Ojo, A. et al.,
New England Journal of Medicine, Vol 349, No. 10, pp 931-940.
"The Growing Problem of Chronic Renal Failure after
Transplantation of a Nonrenal Organ," by Colm Magee, M.D., M.P.H, and Manuel
Pascual, M.D., New England Journal of Medicine, Vol 349, No. 10, pp
994-996.