Affiliation:
1. Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, Singapore
2. Department of Pharmacy, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore
3. Health Services Research and Biostatistics, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore
4. Department of Renal Medicine, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore
Abstract
Introduction: This study explores the effect of different corticosteroid administration timings on the incidence of slow/delayed graft function. Methods: One hundred and twelve kidney transplants from January 2011 to March 2014 were retrospectively analysed. Thirty-six cases were excluded because they were donor-specific antibody positive ( n=16), received thymoglobulin/plasma exchange ( n=11), were ABO-incompatible ( n=6) or suffered graft loss from vascular thrombosis within the first week post-transplant ( n=3). The study period straddled three eras of corticosteroid administration, from intra-operative intravenous (IV) hydrocortisone (Era 1; n=26), to intra-operative IV methylprednisolone (Era 2; n=38) and pre-operative IV methylprednisolone (Era 3; n=12). The primary endpoint was the incidence of slow/delayed graft function. Secondary outcomes included estimated glomerular filtration rate at discharge and 120 and 365 days, rejection (acute and one-year), wound complications, post-transplant diabetes, increase in low-density lipoprotein or body mass index, and cytomegalovirus or BK viraemia within one year. Results: On univariate analysis, pre-operative methylprednisolone was associated with lower incidence of slow/delayed graft function (17%, 55%, 58% in Eras 3, 2, 1 respectively; p=0.041), superior estimated glomerular filtration rate at discharge (median 56, 37 and 43 ml/min for Eras 3, 2, 1 respectively; p=0.033) and at 120 days (median 60, 52, and 46 ml/min for Eras 3, 2, 1 respectively; p=0.017). On multivariate analysis, pre-operative IV methylprednisolone ( vs. Eras 1 and 2 combined; odds ratio 4.79 (90% confidence interval 1.16–19.80); p=0.07) and living donor type ( vs. deceased; odds ratio 5.56 (90% confidence interval 2.25–13.77); p=0.002) were associated with lower incidence of slow/delayed graft function. Conclusion: Pre-operative methylprednisolone was associated with reduced slow/delayed graft function and improved early estimated glomerular filtration.
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