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You have accessRestricted Access

Beneficial effects of treatment of early subclinical rejection: a randomized study.

D Rush, P Nickerson, J Gough, R McKenna, P Grimm, M Cheang, K Trpkov, K Solez and J Jeffery
JASN November 1998, 9 (11) 2129-2134;
D Rush
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P Nickerson
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J Gough
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R McKenna
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P Grimm
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M Cheang
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K Trpkov
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K Solez
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J Jeffery
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Abstract

The prevalence of subclinical rejection, by the Banff criteria, is approximately 30% in the first 3 mo in renal transplant recipients. A randomized study was performed to determine whether the treatment of subclinical rejection with corticosteroids was associated with improved outcomes in these patients. Seventy-two patients, stratified by donor source, were randomized to biopsies at 1, 2, 3, 6, and 12 mo (Biopsy group), or to 6- and 12-mo biopsies only (Control group). Patients were analyzed by "intent to treat" and were followed for a minimum of 2 yr. Patients in the Biopsy arm of the study had a significant decrease in early (months 2 and 3) and late (months 7 to 12) acute rejection episodes, a reduced chronic tubulointerstitial score at 6 mo, and a lower serum creatinine at 24 mo than did patients in the Control arm. There was a trend toward an increase in infectious morbidity, but no increase in mortality, in the patients randomized to the Biopsy group. The results of this study suggest that early protocol biopsies and the treatment of subclinical rejection with corticosteroids may lead to better histologic and functional outcomes in renal transplant recipients.

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Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
Vol. 9, Issue 11
1 Nov 1998
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Beneficial effects of treatment of early subclinical rejection: a randomized study.
D Rush, P Nickerson, J Gough, R McKenna, P Grimm, M Cheang, K Trpkov, K Solez, J Jeffery
JASN Nov 1998, 9 (11) 2129-2134;

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Beneficial effects of treatment of early subclinical rejection: a randomized study.
D Rush, P Nickerson, J Gough, R McKenna, P Grimm, M Cheang, K Trpkov, K Solez, J Jeffery
JASN Nov 1998, 9 (11) 2129-2134;
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Cited By...

  • Multicentre randomised controlled trial protocol of urine CXCL10 monitoring strategy in kidney transplant recipients
  • Progression of Interstitial Fibrosis in Kidney Transplantation
  • Subclinical Rejection Phenotypes at 1 Year Post-Transplant and Outcome of Kidney Allografts
  • Begin at the Beginning to Prevent the End
  • Fibrosis with Inflammation at One Year Predicts Transplant Functional Decline
  • Point: A Call for Advanced Pharmacokinetic and Pharmacodynamic Monitoring to Guide Calcineurin Inhibitor Dosing in Renal Transplant Recipients
  • Presence of FoxP3+ Regulatory T Cells Predicts Outcome of Subclinical Rejection of Renal Allografts
  • Untreated Rejection in 6-Month Protocol Biopsies Is Not Associated with Fibrosis in Serial Biopsies or with Loss of Graft Function
  • Beyond Histology: Novel Tools to Diagnose Allograft Dysfunction
  • Protocol Transplant Biopsies: Are They Really Needed?
  • Protocol Transplant Biopsies in Kidney Allografts: Why and When Are They Indicated?
  • Protocol Transplant Biopsies: An Underutilized Tool in Kidney Transplantation
  • Chronic Renal Allograft Dysfunction
  • Factors Associated with Improvement in Deceased Donor Renal Allograft Function in the 1990s
  • Bioinformatic Analysis of the Urine Proteome of Acute Allograft Rejection
  • The Stability of the Glomerular Filtration Rate after Renal Transplantation Is Improving
  • Computerized Image Analysis of Sirius Red-Stained Renal Allograft Biopsies as a Surrogate Marker to Predict Long-Term Allograft Function
  • The Impact of Repeated Subclinical Acute Rejection on the Progression of Chronic Allograft Nephropathy
  • Heightened Peripheral Blood Lymphocyte CD69 Expression is Neither Sensitive nor Specific as a Noninvasive Diagnostic Test for Renal Allograft Rejection
  • Flow Cytometric Crossmatching in Primary Renal Transplant Recipients with a Negative Anti-Human Globulin Enhanced Cytotoxicity Crossmatch
  • Approaching the Therapeutic Window for Cyclosporine in Kidney Transplantation: A Prospective Study
  • Recommendations for the Outpatient Surveillance of Renal Transplant Recipients
  • Effect of Increasing Baseline Immunosuppression on the Prevalence of Clinical and Subclinical Rejection: A Pilot Study
  • The Relationship of Untreated Borderline Infiltrates by the Banff Criteria to Acute Rejection in Renal Allograft Biopsies
  • Clinical Rejection Is Distinguished from Subclinical Rejection by Increased Infiltration by a Population of Activated Macrophages
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