The role of hypertension as a damaging factor for kidney grafts under cyclosporine therapy

The relative importance of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and hypertension (permanent need for antihypertensive drugs) for the prognosis of kidney grafts was studied in 135 cyclosporine-treated primary cadaver kidney transplant recipients whose grafts lasted more than 1 year. The start point of 1...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of kidney diseases 1993-05, Vol.21 (5), p.79-83
Hauptverfasser: VIANELLO, A, MASTROSIMONE, S, CALCONI, G, GATTI, P. L, CALZAVARA, P, MARESCA, M.-C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The relative importance of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and hypertension (permanent need for antihypertensive drugs) for the prognosis of kidney grafts was studied in 135 cyclosporine-treated primary cadaver kidney transplant recipients whose grafts lasted more than 1 year. The start point of 1 year after transplantation was chosen because hypertension developed within the first year in all our hypertensive patients. Graft prognosis in hypertensive patients was not significantly worse than that of normotensive patients; moreover at multivariate analysis, age at transplantation and GFR at 1 year (P = 0.014), but not hypertension, were significant prognostic factors for the graft. At logistic regression, GFR was a significant variable for hypertension (P = 0.009), but hypertension was not a significant variable for renal failure at 1 year (GFR < or = 0.83 mL/sec [50 mL n]; P, NS). Accordingly, hypertension per se resulted much more as a consequence of reduced renal function than as a direct cause of graft damage. However, when hypertensive patients were divided into controlled and uncontrolled, uncontrolled hypertensive patients had the worst prognosis (P = 0.03), and blood pressure control proved a strong prognostic factor for the graft, even after GFR was considered (P = value of the model considering blood pressure control, GFR, and age at transplantation: 0.007). Our data suggest that, apart from being an expression of reduced renal function, hypertension is also a direct kidney graft damaging agent, a role that can be controlled by strict reduction of blood pressure levels.
ISSN:0272-6386
1523-6838
DOI:10.1016/0272-6386(93)70099-K