Age and sex disparity in infectious complications after kidney transplantation
kidney transplantation (KT). BACKGROUNDPotent immunosuppression lowers the incidence of acute graft rejection but increases the risk of post-transplant infections. Older adults and females are at high risk of infections leading to poor outcome after KT. MATERIALSOur analysis consisted of 66 males an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Bratislava Medical Journal 2022, Vol.123 (7), p.463-469 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | kidney transplantation (KT). BACKGROUNDPotent immunosuppression lowers the incidence of acute graft rejection but increases the risk of post-transplant infections. Older adults and females are at high risk of infections leading to poor outcome after KT. MATERIALSOur analysis consisted of 66 males and 34 females after KT, average age 47.5±12.6 years. RESULTSFemale gender was a RF for the incidence of infection in general (p=0.0054), recurrent (p=0.0239), bacterial (p=0.0125) and mycotic infection (p=0.0103), recurrent bacterial infection (p=0.0258) 1st month after KT, RF for the incidence of infection in general (p=0.0218), bacterial (p=0.0186), mycotic (p=0.0318), recurrent (p=0.0216), recurrent bacterial infection (p=0.0368) from 1st to 6th month after KT and RF for the incidence of bacterial (p=0.0144), single (p=0.0355), recurrent (p=0.0007) and single bacterial infection (p=0.0309) 6 months after KT. Age >60 years was not found as a RF for the incidence of single, repeat infection regarding its aetiology. CONCLUSIONWe found significant sex differences in the incidence of single and repeat infections in different time intervals after KT (Tab. 4, Fig. 3, Ref. 31). |
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ISSN: | 1336-0345 0006-9248 1336-0345 |
DOI: | 10.4149/BLL_2022_074 |