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Long‐term response to renal ischaemia in the human kidney after partial nephrectomy: results from a prospective clinical trial
Author(s) -
Kallingal George J.S.,
Weinberg Joel M.,
Reis Isildinha M.,
Nehra Avinash,
Venkatachalam Manjeri A.,
Parekh Dipen J.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
bju international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.773
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1464-410X
pISSN - 1464-4096
DOI - 10.1111/bju.13192
Subject(s) - nephrectomy , medicine , term (time) , kidney , warm ischemia , ischemia , human kidney , urology , physics , quantum mechanics , reperfusion injury
Objective To assess the 1‐year renal functional changes in patients undergoing partial nephrectomy with intra‐operative renal biopsies. Patients and Methods A total of 40 patients with a single renal mass deemed fit for a partial nephrectomy were recruited prospectively between January 2009 and October 2010. We performed renal biopsies of normal renal parenchyma and collected serum markers before, during and after surgically induced renal clamp ischaemia during the partial nephrectomy. We then followed patients clinically with interval serum creatinine and physical examination. Results Peri‐operative data from 40 patients showed a transient increase in creatinine levels which did not correlate with ischaemia time. Renal ultrastructural changes were generally mild and included mitochondrial swelling, which resolved at the post‐perfusion biopsy. A total of 37 patients had 1‐year follow‐up data. Creatinine at 1 year increased by 0.121 mg/ dL , which represents a 12.99% decrease in renal function from baseline (preoperative creatinine 0.823 mg/ dL , estimated glomerular filtration rate = 93.9 mL/min/1.73 m 2 ). The only factors predicting creatinine change on multivariate analysis were patient age, race and ischaemia type, with cold ischaemia being associated with higher creatinine level. Importantly, the duration of ischaemia did not show any significant correlation with renal function change, either as a continuous variable ( P = 0.452) or as a categorical variable ( P = 0.792). Conclusions Our data suggest that limited ischaemia is generally well tolerated in the setting of partial nephrectomy and does not directly correspond to long‐term renal functional decline. For surgeons performing partial nephrectomy, the kidney can be safely clamped to ensure optimum oncological outcomes.