The challenge of renal function in heart transplant children

Renal dysfunction may occur after pediatric heart transplantation and impacts on long-term prognosis. This study aims to review the incidence and mechanisms of chronic nephropathy following heart transplantation, and suggest therapeutic directions. The proportion of pediatric heart-transplant recipi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, West) West), 2007-03, Vol.22 (3), p.333-342
Hauptverfasser: Di Filippo, Sylvie, Cochat, Pierre, Bozio, André
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container_title Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, West)
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creator Di Filippo, Sylvie
Cochat, Pierre
Bozio, André
description Renal dysfunction may occur after pediatric heart transplantation and impacts on long-term prognosis. This study aims to review the incidence and mechanisms of chronic nephropathy following heart transplantation, and suggest therapeutic directions. The proportion of pediatric heart-transplant recipients with impaired renal function varies from 22 to 57%, and end-stage renal failure from 3 to 10%, depending on the method used for estimating the glomerular filtration rate. The pathophysiology of renal dysfunction is in part due to calcineurin inhibitor-induced renal vasoconstriction, through activation of the intrarenal renin-angiotensin system, TGF-beta1 upregulation and TGF-beta1 gene polymorphisms. Overproduction of angiotensin II, associated with angiotensin-converting-enzyme genotype, might be associated with poor prognosis and pharmacological factor gene polymorphisms, and may contribute to variation of calcineurine inhibitor exposure in the kidney. Strategies to prevent renal dysfunction include reducing calcineurine inhibitor exposure or delaying calcineurine inhibitor administration from the early post-transplant period. Calcium channel blockers and angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors, blockade of angiotensin II, or anti-TGF-beta1 antibodies might limit nephrotoxicity. No accurate marker can predict the potential of renal lesions to develop. Lowering calcineurine inhibitors levels with immunosuppressive agents that are either less nephrotoxic or non-nephrotoxic should be formally studied. Of high interest is the impact of genetic polymorphism on the development of renal dysfunction.
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subjects Adults
Calcineurin Inhibitors
Child
Chronic Disease
Creatinine
Enzymes
Heart Transplantation - adverse effects
Heart transplants
Humans
Immunosuppressive Agents - adverse effects
Kidney - drug effects
Kidney Diseases - diagnosis
Kidney Diseases - etiology
Kidney Diseases - physiopathology
Kidney Diseases - therapy
Medical prognosis
Pathology
Pathophysiology
Pediatrics
title The challenge of renal function in heart transplant children
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