Title of article
Renal Allograft Rejection: Noninvasive Ultrasound- and MRI-Based Diagnostics
Author/Authors
Jehn, Ulrich Department of Medicine - Division of General Internal Medicine - Nephrology and Rheumatology - University Hospital of Muenster - Munster, Germany , Schuette-Nuetgen, Katharina Department of Medicine - Division of General Internal Medicine - Nephrology and Rheumatology - University Hospital of Muenster - Munster, Germany , Kentrup, Dominik Department of Medicine - Division of General Internal Medicine - Nephrology and Rheumatology - University Hospital of Muenster - Munster, Germany , Hoerr, Verena Department of Clinical Radiology - University Hospital of Muenster - Munster, Germany , Reuter, Stefan Department of Medicine - Division of General Internal Medicine - Nephrology and Rheumatology - University Hospital of Muenster - Munster, Germany
Pages
9
From page
1
To page
9
Abstract
To date, allogeneic kidney transplantation remains the best available therapeutic option for patients with end-stage renal disease
regarding overall survival and quality of life. Despite the advancements in immunosuppressive drugs and protocols, episodes of
acute allograft rejection, a sterile inflammatory process, continue to endanger allograft survival. Since effective treatment for acute
rejection episodes is available, instant diagnosis of this potentially reversible graft injury is imperative. Although histological
examination by invasive core needle biopsy of the graft remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of ongoing rejection, it is
always associated with the risk of causing substantial graft injury as a result of the biopsy procedure itself. At the same time,
biopsies are not immediately feasible for a considerable number of patients taking anticoagulants due to the high risk of
complications such as bleeding and uneven distribution of pathological changes within the graft. is can result in the wrong
diagnosis due to the small size of the tissue sample taken. erefore, there is a need for a tool that overcomes these problems by
being noninvasive and capable of assessing the whole organ at the same time for specific and fast detection of acute allograft
rejection. In this article, we review current state-of-the-art approaches for noninvasive diagnostics of acute renal transplant
inflammation, i.e., rejection. We especially focus on nonradiation-based methods using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
and ultrasound.
Keywords
MRI , Ultrasound , Noninvasive , ESRD
Journal title
Contrast Media and Molecular Imaging
Serial Year
2019
Full Text URL
Record number
2618677
Link To Document