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A propensity score matched analysis shows no adverse effect of early steroid withdrawal in non-diabetic kidney transplant recipients with and without glomerulonephritis
Author(s) -
Sean Barbour,
Ognjenka Djurdjev,
John S. Gill,
Jianghu Dong,
Jagbir Gill
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
kidney international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.499
H-Index - 276
eISSN - 1523-1755
pISSN - 0085-2538
DOI - 10.1016/j.kint.2019.02.041
Subject(s) - medicine , steroid , kidney transplantation , adverse effect , transplantation , propensity score matching , diabetes mellitus , steroid hormone , gastroenterology , endocrinology , hormone
Recurrent glomerulonephritis (GN) is a common cause of graft loss after kidney transplantation. Steroids are critical to GN management before transplantation, but it is unclear if early steroid withdrawal after transplantation increases the risk of graft loss in patients with GN. Here USRDS data were used to examine the association of early steroid withdrawal with death censored graft loss and all cause graft loss in GN and non-GN adult, non-diabetic, non-sensitized first kidney-only transplant recipients from 1998-2012. A 2-stage propensity score-based matching algorithm was used to match early steroid withdrawal to steroid-maintained patients in the GN and non-GN groups. Multivariate Cox models using a robust variance estimator to account for matched pairs were used to examine the association of early steroid withdrawal with death censored or all cause graft loss in patients with (6388 patients each in early steroid withdrawal and steroid groups) or without GN (6590 each in early steroid withdrawal and steroid groups). Early steroid withdrawal was not associated with an increased risk of death censored or all cause graft loss in patients with or without GN. These findings were consistent across GN types and after accounting for transplant center. Thus, our findings support consideration of early steroid withdrawal in patients with GN at high risk of the adverse consequences of prolonged steroid exposure.

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