SNEF - Artigos publicados em revistas indexadas na Pubmed/Medline
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Browsing SNEF - Artigos publicados em revistas indexadas na Pubmed/Medline by Author "Almeida, M."
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- Bone Mineral Density After Simultaneous Kidney–PancreasPublication . Pereira, S.; Pedroso, S.; Martins, L.; Santos, P.; Almeida, M.; Freitas, C.; Dias, L.; Dores, J.; Almeida, R.; Henriques, A.C.; Teixeira, M.ABSTRACT Bone disease and an high risk of fractures are major problems in transplantation. Among diabetic patients undergoing simultaneous kidney–pancreas (SKP) transplantation, there are few studies assessing long-term effects on bone mass. The aim of this study was to evaluate bone mineral density (BMD) over 4 years follow-up after SKP transplantation. Fifty-seven patients had 22.8 5.3 years of prior diabetes, 65% were female, and the overall mean age was 24.3 5.93 years. At the time of transplantation, the lumbar spine and femoral neck T-scores were 1.75 1.05 and 1.95 0.73, respectively; 28% of subjects had evidence of osteoporosis. One year after transplantation, 77.6% of patients displayed improved lumbar T-scores to 1.33 0.94 (.044) with stable femoral neck T-scores. Bone densitometry enhanced gradually through the 4 years follow-up: lumbar T-score to 1.04 0.67 (.004) and femoral neck T-score to 1.69 0.49 (.12). At year 4, no osteoporosis cases were detected but 86.7% of patients did not receive steroids in the immunosuppressive regimen. The graft function remained stable (serum creatinine, 1.2 mg/dL; fasting glucose, 87.7 mg/dL). During the follow-up, BMD improved more significantly at cortical sites. Our study reports a reduced prevalence of fractures (8.7%) compared with the literature, which could be related to a steroid-sparing protocol and/or aggressively treatment of osteoporosis.
- Histiocytic sarcoma; case report of a rare disease in a kidney transplant recipientPublication . Ventura Aguiar, P.; Dias, C.; Azevedo, P.; Silva, H.; Almeida, M.; Pedroso, S.; Martins, L.; Dias, L.; Rodrigues, A.; Viscaíño, R.; Cabrita, A.; Henriques, A.BACKGROUND: Histiocytic sarcoma (HS) is a rare hematologic neoplasm with a few hundred cases having been described to date.
- Impact of preformed donor-specific antibodies against HLA class I on kidney graft outcomes: Comparative analysis of exclusively anti-Cw vs anti-A and/or -B antibodiesPublication . Santos, S.; Malheiro, J.; Tafulo, S.; Dias, L.; Carmo, R.; Sampaio, S.; Costa, M.; Campos, A.; Pedroso, S.; Almeida, M.; Martins, L.; Henriques, C.; Cabrita, A.AIM: To analyze the clinical impact of preformed antiHLA-Cw vs antiHLA-A and/or -B donor-specific antibodies (DSA) in kidney transplantation. METHODS: Retrospective study, comparing 12 patients transplanted with DSA exclusively antiHLA-Cw with 23 patients with preformed DSA antiHLA-A and/or B. RESULTS: One year after transplantation there were no differences in terms of acute rejection between the two groups (3 and 6 cases, respectively in the DSA-Cw and the DSA-A-B groups; P = 1). At one year, eGFR was not significantly different between groups (median 59 mL/min in DSA-Cw group, compared to median 51 mL/min in DSA-A-B group, P = 0.192). Moreover, kidney graft survival was similar between groups at 5-years (100% in DSA-Cw group vs 91% in DSA-A-B group, P = 0.528). The sole independent predictor of antibody mediated rejection (AMR) incidence was DSA strength (HR = 1.07 per 1000 increase in MFI, P = 0.034). AMR was associated with shortened graft survival at 5-years, with 75% and 100% grafts surviving in patients with or without AMR, respectively (Log-rank P = 0.005). CONCLUSION: Our data indicate that DSA-Cw are associated with an identical risk of AMR and impact on graft function in comparison with "classical" class I DSA.
- Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin in kidney transplantation is an early marker of graft dysfunction and is associated with one-year renal functionPublication . Fonseca, Isabel; Carlos Oliveira, José; Almeida, M.; Cruz, M.; Malho, A.; Martins, La Salete; Dias, L.; Pedroso, S.; Santos, J.; Lobato, L.; Castro-Henriques, A.; Mendonça, D.Urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (uNGAL) has been suggested as potential early marker of delayed graft function (DGF) following kidney transplantation (KTx). We conducted a prospective study in 40 consecutive KTx recipients to evaluate serial changes of uNGAL within the first week after KTx and assess its performance in predicting DGF (dialysis requirement during initial posttransplant week) and graft function throughout first year. Urine samples were collected on post-KTx days 0, 1, 2, 4, and 7. Linear mixed and multivariable regression models, receiver-operating characteristic (ROC), and areas under ROC curves were used. At all-time points, mean uNGAL levels were significantly higher in patients developing DGF (n = 18). Shortly after KTx (3-6 h), uNGAL values were higher in DGF recipients (on average +242 ng/mL, considering mean dialysis time of 4.1 years) and rose further in following days, contrasting with prompt function recipients. Day-1 uNGAL levels accurately predicted DGF (AUC-ROC = 0.93), with a performance higher than serum creatinine (AUC-ROC = 0.76), and similar to cystatin C (AUC-ROC = 0.95). Multivariable analyses revealed that uNGAL levels at days 4 and 7 were strongly associated with one-year serum creatinine. Urinary NGAL is an early marker of graft injury and is independently associated with dialysis requirement within one week after KTx and one-year graft function.
- Pancreas-Kidney Transplantation: Complications and Readmissions in 9-Years of Follow-upPublication . Martins, L.; Henriques, A.C.; Dias, L.; Almeida, M.; Pedroso, S.; Freitas, C.; Pereira, S.; Fructuoso, M.; Dores, J.; Oliveira, F.; Almeida, R.; Cabrita, A.; Teixeira, M.ABSTRACT Over years, we have performed 93 simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplants (SPKT) The morbidity of this procedure is high compared with kidney transplantation alone; readmissions are frequent and costs are higher. Herein we have presented the complica- tions during follow-up of these 93 patients. Their mean age was 34 years and prior dialysis time was 32 25 months. The median hospital stay on the first admission for the transplant procedure was 22 days, including days in the intensive care unit. Bleeding, thrombosis, and infection were the most frequent reasons for prolonged hospitalization. Thirty patients underwent surgical reinterventions. Incidence of acute rejection episodes was 11.8%After discharge, 74.2% of the patients had 197 readmission episodes with infection being the main cause, urinary tract infections, the most frequent; however, systemic viral and fungal infections required the longest readmission periods. The need for surgical interventions, graft dysfunction, and vascular problems were the remaining causes of readmission. At the end of follow-up, 87 patients were alive, 86 with well-functioning kidneys and 74 with normal functioning pancreata. Global survival rates for patient, kidney, and pancreas were 96%95%and 81% at 1-year; 93%90%and 79% at 5-years; and 93%90% and 79% at 9-years. Although pancreas–kidney transplant patients are complex presenting many management difficulties, our overall results represent positive stimulus for diabetic patients.
- Posttransplant allosensitization in low immunological risk kidney and kidney-pancreas graft recipients.Publication . Malheiro, J.; Tafulo, S.; Dias, L.; Martins, La Salete; Fonseca, Isabel; Almeida, M.; Pedroso, S.; Freitas, F.; Beirão, I.; Castro-Henriques, A.; Cabrita, A.INTRODUCTION: Posttransplantation allosensitization prevalence and effect on kidney grafts outcomes remain unsettled. METHODS: Between 2007 and 2012, 408 patients received a primary kidney graft (with 68 patients also receiving a pancreas graft) after a negative cytotoxic crossmatch. All patients had a pretransplant negative anti-HLA screening and 0% panel reactive antibodies. We analyzed retrospectively the results of anti-HLA antibodies screening by Luminex assay, performed between 6 and 24 months after transplant, and searched for the risk factors for antibody positivity and its impact on kidney graft outcomes. RESULTS: Anti-HLA antibodies prevalence at 6 months was 17.4%. Previous steroid-insensitive acute rejection was the only risk factor for both anti-HLA classes detected antibodies. Antithymocyte globulin induction was also a risk factor for anti-HLA-I antibodies. Antibody positivity status was associated with reduced graft function at 12 months and graft survival at 5 years (91.5% versus 96.4%, P = 0.03). In multivariable Cox analysis, delayed graft function (HR = 6.1, P < 0.01), HLA mismatches >3 (HR = 10.2, P = 0.03), and antibody positivity for anti-HLA class II (HR = 5.1, P = 0.04) or class I/II (HR = 13.8, P < 0.01) were independent predictors of graft loss. CONCLUSIONS: Allosensitization against HLA class II ± I after transplant was associated with adverse kidney graft outcomes. A screening protocol seems advisable within the first year in low immunological risk patients.