Spital A
University of Rochester School of Medicine, New York, USA.
Transplantation. 1998 May 15;65(9):1187-91. doi: 10.1097/00007890-199805150-00008.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients have generally been excluded from transplantation. Recent advances in the management and prognosis of these patients suggest that this policy should be reevaluated.
To explore the current views of U.S. transplant centers toward transplanting asymptomatic HIV-infected patients with end-stage renal disease, a written survey was mailed to the directors of transplantation at all 248 renal transplant centers in the United States.
All 148 responding centers said they require HIV testing of prospective kidney recipients, and 84% of these centers would not transplant an individual who refuses HIV testing. The vast majority of responding centers would not transplant a kidney from a cadaveric (88%) or a living donor (91%) into an asymptomatic HIV-infected patient who is otherwise a good candidate for transplantation. Among the few centers that would consider transplanting an HIV-infected patient, not a single center had performed such a transplant in the year prior to the survey. Most centers fear that transplantation in the face of HIV infection would be harmful to the individual, and some believe that it would be a waste of precious organs.
The great majority of U.S. renal transplant centers will not transplant kidneys to HIV-infected patients with end-stage renal disease, even if their infection is asymptomatic. However, advances in the management of HIV infection and a review of relevant ethical issues suggest that this approach should be reconsidered.
感染人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的患者通常被排除在移植之外。这些患者在管理和预后方面的最新进展表明,这一政策应重新评估。
为探究美国移植中心对为无症状HIV感染的终末期肾病患者进行移植的当前看法,向美国所有248个肾移植中心的移植主任邮寄了一份书面调查问卷。
所有148个回复中心表示,他们要求对潜在肾移植受者进行HIV检测,其中84%的中心不会为拒绝HIV检测的个体进行移植。绝大多数回复中心不会将来自尸体供者(88%)或活体供者(91%)的肾脏移植给无症状HIV感染且在其他方面适合移植的患者。在少数考虑为HIV感染患者进行移植的中心中,在调查前一年没有一个中心进行过此类移植。大多数中心担心在HIV感染情况下进行移植会对个体有害,一些中心认为这会浪费宝贵的器官。
绝大多数美国肾移植中心不会将肾脏移植给终末期肾病的HIV感染患者,即使他们的感染无症状。然而,HIV感染管理方面的进展以及对相关伦理问题的审视表明,这种做法应重新考虑。