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Patients with Persistent New-onset Diabetes After Transplantation Have Greater Weight Gain After Kidney Transplantation

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Specialty General Medicine
Date 2013 Oct 18
PMID 24133345
Citations 5
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Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the difference in BMI pattern between patients with persistent new-onset diabetes after transplantation (P-NODAT) and without new-onset diabetes after transplantation (N-NODAT) in a retrospective matched case-control (1:3) analysis. Thirty-six patients who developed P-NODAT were identified among 186 adult renal transplant recipients with no evidence of pretransplant diabetes mellitus who underwent kidney transplantation from September 1997 to March 2008 and were treated with a triple regimen including tacrolimus. The controls were selected to match the patients for pretransplant BMI, age at transplantation (± 5 yr), and date of transplantation (± 12 months). Finally, 20 P-NODAT patients and 60 N-NODAT patients were selected. The pre- and posttransplant BMI data were collected every 16 weeks for up to 80 weeks. The clinical characteristics did not differ between the P-NODAT group and N-NODAT group. BMI increased faster in the P-NODAT group than in the N-NODAT group. The mixed-model analysis showed that patients with P-NODAT exhibited a faster increase in BMI. P-NODAT is associated with posttransplant weight gain. The risk of P-NODAT should be considered in patients with rapid weight gain after transplantation.

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