Immunosuppression after pediatric liver transplant: The parents’ perspective
Background For children with liver transplants (LT), achieving an “ideal outcome” is a balancing act: too little immunosuppression begets graft injury; too much begets systemic complications. We aimed to delineate the parental perspective on this tightrope. Methods Parents of children with LT comple...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical transplantation 2023-04, Vol.37 (4), p.e14931-n/a |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
For children with liver transplants (LT), achieving an “ideal outcome” is a balancing act: too little immunosuppression begets graft injury; too much begets systemic complications. We aimed to delineate the parental perspective on this tightrope.
Methods
Parents of children with LT completed an internet‐based survey about their child's immunosuppression.
Results
Children of respondents (n = 82) were a median 4 years from primary LT (range 0–22); 73% were on immunosuppression monotherapy. Parents’ top concerns were related to immunosuppression complications; 46% were more concerned about immunosuppression complications than rejection; only 17% were more concerned about rejection than immunosuppression complications. Among parents of children on immunosuppression monotherapy, 29% still worried more about immunosuppression complications than rejection, 48% expressed equal concern for both. Time since LT (0‐4 vs. >4 years) was not associated with concern level for rejection or immunosuppression complications. Caregivers were significantly more certain that their child's immunosuppression regimen was correct to prevent rejection than to mitigate complications (p |
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ISSN: | 0902-0063 1399-0012 |
DOI: | 10.1111/ctr.14931 |