Author/Authors :
Ganji, Mohammad Reza Department of Nephrology - Shariati Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Broumand, Behrooz Department of Nephrology - Rasoule Akram Hospital - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
The incidence of acute rejection of the kidney allograft in the world
has been around 15% during the period between 2001 and 2003. It
is clinically defined as an elevation in the level of serum creatinine
by more than 0.3 mg/dL and is diagnosed by kidney biopsy. On
pathologic examination, the interstitium of the allograft is diffusely
edematous and infiltrated by CD4 and CD8 lymphocytes. Tubulitis
occurs when the lymphocytes and monocytes extend into the walls
and lumina of the tubules. Presence of leukocytes determines
infection or antibody-mediated rejection. Typically C4d staining
is negative. Other causes of acute allograft dysfunction included
prerenal factors, interstitial nephritis, infection, acute tubular
necrosis, toxicity by drugs, and obstruction in the urinary tract.
The primary diagnostic assessments include history, especially
adherence to immunosuppressive therapy, physical examination,
blood and urine laboratory tests, measurement of the serum levels
of the drugs, and ultrasonography. Diagnosis of acute cellular
rejection depends on biopsy, CD20 staining for refractory cases,
negative C4d staining, presence of markers of activating lymphocyte,
and proteomic study.
Treatment of acute cellular rejection in kidney transplant recipients
include pulse steroid for the first rejection episode. It can be
repeated for recurrent or resistant rejection. Thymoglobulin and
OKT3 are used as the second line of treatment if graft function
is deteriorating. Changing the protocol from cyclosporine to
tacrolimus or adding mycophenolate mofetil or sirolimus might
be effective. Prognosis depends on number of rejection episodes,
the use of potent drugs, time of rejection from transplantation,
and response to treatment.
Keywords :
kidney transplantation , graft rejection , cellular immunity , immunosuppression