Davison J M
Am J Kidney Dis. 1987 Apr;9(4):374-80. doi: 10.1016/s0272-6386(87)80140-3.
Renal transplantation is usually accompanied by an improvement in reproductive function. The possibility of conception in women of childbearing age emphasizes the need for counseling, and couples who want a child should be encouraged to discuss all implications, with the advice based on strict guidelines. If a recipient becomes pregnant, she must be monitored as a high-risk patient. Management requires particular attention to BP control, renal function, and all infection, as well as fetal surveillance. Just under 40% of conceptions do not go beyond the first trimester, but of those that do, greater than 90% end successfully. In most patients, renal hemodynamics improve during gestation, but permanent impairment occurs in 15% of pregnancies. Other patients may experience transient deterioration in late pregnancy (with or without proteinuria). Patients have a 30% chance of developing hypertension, preeclampsia, or both. Despite its pelvic location, the transplanted kidney rarely produces dystocia and experiences no apparent mechanical injury during vaginal delivery. Thus, cesarean section should be reserved for obstetric reasons only. Aseptic technique, bacterial prophylaxis even for trivial surgery, and steroid augmentation are necessary. Preterm deliveries occur in 45% to 60%, and intrauterine growth retardation in at least 20%, of gestations. Neonatal complications include respiratory distress syndrome, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, adrenocortical insufficiency, and infection. No predominant or frequent developmental abnormalities have been described, and data on infancy and childhood are encouraging. Future goals should be to improve prepregnancy assessment criteria, to reassess the rationale and implications of immunosuppression during pregnancy, and to monitor the remote effects of pregnancy on both renal prognosis and the offspring.