Midtvedt K, Hartmann A, Sund S
Medical Department B, National Hospital, University of Oslo, Norway.
Clin Transplant. 1998 Aug;12(4):300-2.
Acute renal allograft rejection is suspected by the clinician when the serum creatinine value increases in a patient for no other particular cause. A renal allograft biopsy may confirm the diagnosis. This report describes 2 patients with stable serum creatinine; however, protocol biopsy showed acute rejection changes according to the Banff criteria. No anti-rejection treatment was started and their graft function remained stable for 6 months. These two cases focus on the fact that renal allograft rejection should first of all be regarded as a clinical diagnosis which could be substantiated by histological findings.