Department of Surgery, Surgery and Abdominal Transplantation Division, Université Catholique de Louvain, Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc, Brussels, Belgium.
Department of Surgery, Surgery and Abdominal Transplantation Division, Université Catholique de Louvain, Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc, Brussels, Belgium.
Transplant Proc. 2022 Sep;54(7):1786-1794. doi: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2022.03.058. Epub 2022 Aug 6.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of a recipient's obesity on posttransplant complications and patient and graft survival.
A single-institution, retrospective study was performed on obese renal transplant recipients (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m, n = 102) from January 2010 to December 2018, matched with non-obese recipients (BMI < 30 kg/m, n = 204). For comparison, for every obese patient we selected 2 nonobese patients with a similar age, sex, and period of transplantation. The comparative analysis included patient and graft survival as primary outcomes and graft function and postoperative complications as a secondary outcome.
Recipient demographics were comparable in both groups except for diabetic nephropathy in obese patients (P = .0006). Obesity was strongly related to a poorer patient survival (risk ratio [RR] = 2.83 confidence interval [CI] 95% 1.14-7.04; P = .020) but there was no observed difference in graft survival (P = .6). While early graft function was inferior in the obese population (RR = 2.41; CI 95% 1.53-3.79; P = .00016), during late follow-up, no statistically significant differences were observed between both groups (P = .36). Obese recipients had a significantly higher risk of delayed graft function (RR = 1.93; CI 95% (1.19-3.1), P = .0077), heart infarction (RR = 7; CI 95% 1.68-29.26; P = .0042), wound infections (RR = 8; CI 95% 1.96-32.87; P = .0015), diabetes aggravation (RR = 3.13; CI 95% 1.29-7.6; P = .011), and surgical revision for eventration (RR = 8; CI 95% 1.22-52.82; P = .026) when compared with nonobese recipients.
Despite the inferior early kidney graft function in obese recipients, there was no difference observed at the long-term follow-up. However, recipient obesity demonstrated a negative effect on patient survival and postoperative complications.
本研究旨在评估受者肥胖对移植后并发症以及患者和移植物存活率的影响。
对 2010 年 1 月至 2018 年 12 月间的肥胖(BMI≥30kg/m²)肾脏移植受者(n=102)进行了单中心回顾性研究,与非肥胖受者(BMI<30kg/m²,n=204)进行了匹配。为了进行比较,对于每一位肥胖患者,我们选择了 2 位年龄、性别和移植时间相似的非肥胖患者。比较分析包括患者和移植物存活率作为主要结果,移植物功能和术后并发症作为次要结果。
两组患者的人口统计学特征除肥胖患者中糖尿病肾病(P=0.0006)外,其余均相似。肥胖与较差的患者存活率显著相关(风险比[RR]2.83,95%置信区间[CI]1.14-7.04;P=0.020),但移植物存活率无差异(P=0.6)。肥胖人群的早期移植物功能较差(RR 2.41,95%CI 1.53-3.79;P=0.00016),但在后期随访中,两组之间无统计学差异(P=0.36)。肥胖受者发生延迟移植物功能障碍的风险显著增加(RR 1.93,95%CI 1.19-3.1,P=0.0077)、心肌梗死(RR 7,95%CI 1.68-29.26,P=0.0042)、伤口感染(RR 8,95%CI 1.96-32.87,P=0.0015)、糖尿病恶化(RR 3.13,95%CI 1.29-7.6,P=0.011)和疝修补术(RR 8,95%CI 1.22-52.82,P=0.026)的风险增加。
尽管肥胖受者的早期肾脏移植物功能较差,但在长期随访中无差异。然而,受者肥胖对患者存活率和术后并发症有负面影响。