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Clinical Outcomes of Hepatitis C Treatment Before and After Kidney Transplantation and Its Impact on Time to Transplant: A Multicenter Study

Overview
Journal Am J Transplant
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty General Surgery
Date 2018 May 15
PMID 29758123
Citations 6
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Waitlist time for kidney transplantation is long but may be shortened with the utilization of hepatitis C positive allografts. We retrospectively reviewed the course of 36 hepatitis C positive patients awaiting kidney transplantation at 2 large centers within the same health system, with near-identical care delivery models with the exception of timing of hepatitis C treatment, to determine the impact of timing of hepatitis C treatment on access to transplant, waitlist time, and treatment efficacy and tolerability. The majority of patients had hepatitis C genotype 1a or 1b, and all received direct acting antiviral therapy with 100% treatment response. One patient underwent transplantation in the pretransplant treatment group. The 1-year transplantation rate was 12.5% vs 67.9% (P = .0013) in those treated posttransplantation. The median waitlist time in the posttransplant group was 122 (interquartile range [IQR] 21.5, 531.0) days, which was significantly shorter than the center's regional and national wait time. Pathologic review revealed no difference in allograft quality. Overall treatment related adverse events were not different between the 2 groups. A strategy of posttransplant hepatitis C treatment increased access to transplant and reduced waitlist time. Delaying treatment until after transplant did not appear to adversely affect recipients' kidney allograft or overall survival.

Citing Articles

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Liyanage L, Muzaale A, Henderson M, Durand C Curr Transplant Rep. 2020; 6(2):167-176.

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A safety and efficacy analysis of direct-antiviral therapy in patients with chronic hepatitis C after renal transplantation.

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Bowring M, Shaffer A, Massie A, Cameron A, Desai N, Sulkowski M Am J Transplant. 2019; 19(8):2329-2341.

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