• J Postgrad Med · Oct 2023

    Diarrhea after kidney transplantation: A study of risk factors and outcomes.

    • A D Patil, N G Saxena, S B Thakare, A E Pajai, D Bajpai, and T E Jamale.
    • Department of Nephrology, Seth GS Medical College and KEM Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.
    • J Postgrad Med. 2023 Oct 1; 69 (4): 205214205-214.

    BackgroundDiarrhea in kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) can be associated with significant morbidity.Material And MethodsWe evaluated 198 KTRs for a history of diarrhea post-kidney transplant at a tertiary care center in western India over 1 year. A protocol-based evaluation of diarrhea was done with respect to clinical features, diagnostic evaluation, associated acute allograft dysfunction, and its impact on long-term allograft function. Primary outcomes of interest were: chronic allograft injury (CAI) and the need for mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) withdrawal. We also assessed the effect of MMF withdrawal on the risk of the development of CAI.ResultsEighty-five of 198 (42.5%) recipients experienced diarrhea and a total of 140 diarrheal episodes were evaluated. The mean age of these 85 recipients was 38 ± 12 years and 72 (84.7%) were males. 73 of 85 recipients were on MMF at the time of diarrhea and in 35 (48%) of them MMF withdrawal was needed for chronic and persistent symptoms. Diarrhea was attributed to infective etiologies in 90 of 140 (64.2%) cases. Among the microbiologically confirmed infective diarrheal episodes, giardia and cryptosporidium were the common pathogens in 11/28 (39%) and 6/28 (21.4%) episodes respectively. One hundred and twenty-eight episodes out of 140 (91.4%) episodes were complicated by acute allograft dysfunction. Forty-one of 85 recipients (48.2%) developed chronic allograft injury and 12 (14.1%) developed allograft rejection (acute and/or chronic). Probability of chronic allograft injury was higher in those with MMF withdrawal.ConclusionDiarrhea post-kidney transplant adversely affects graft function, especially after MMF withdrawal.

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