2581 Cryptococcosis in kidney transplant recipients: a nationwide multicenter retrospective cohort study—CRITERE study

Abstract Background and Aims Cryptococcosis stands as the third most common invasive fungal infection in solid organ transplant recipients. Clinical management and prognosis of the disease remains largely unexplored in the context of kidney transplant recipients. Our main objective was to describe t...

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Published inNephrology, dialysis, transplantation Vol. 39; no. Supplement_1
Main Authors Tardieu, Laurene, Divard, Gillian, Scemla, Anne, Kaminski, Hannah, Kamar, Nassim, Levi, Charlène, Moal, Valérie, Tourret-Arnaud, Jérôme, Quintrec, Moglie Le, Rafat, Cédric
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 23.05.2024
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Summary:Abstract Background and Aims Cryptococcosis stands as the third most common invasive fungal infection in solid organ transplant recipients. Clinical management and prognosis of the disease remains largely unexplored in the context of kidney transplant recipients. Our main objective was to describe the natural history of cryptococcosis after kidney transplantation from the graft patterns of kidney injury to the long term outcomes. Method We established a nationwide cohort of adult kidney transplant recipients diagnosed with cryptococcosis between 2002 and 2019 in France. All data were gathered starting from the transplantation date and encompassed up to the latest follow-up consultation. All putative causes of AKI as claimed by the attending clinicians were recorded. Cases were matched (ratio 1:6) with kidney transplant recipients from the French prospective multicenter cohort DIVAT with parameters at time of transplant including immunosuppression and known risk factors of cryptococcosis such as age, history of smoke, history of cancer and HIV status. Transplant outcomes (graft failure and patient death) were then compared between matched patients. Results 88 patients were included. Patients were predominantly male (n = 61, 69.3%), with a mean age of 57.0 years [SD ±13.3]. The majority of patients were primary kidney transplants (n = 71, 80.7%) with a median time from ESRD to transplantation of 2.8 years [IQ 1.25-5]. The majority of patients received ATG as induction therapy for their transplant (n = 50, 69.4%)Acute kidney injury (AKI) at diagnosis involved 37.3% of the patients with 13.3% requiring renal replacement therapy. AKI staging was distributed as follows, AKI grade 1 in 12.5% of patients, grade 2 in 13.3% of patients, and grade 3 in 11.5% of patients. During the induction stage, 39% of patients developed amphotericin B-related AKI. AKI resulting from tacrolimus overdose subsequent to tacrolimus/fluconazole interaction occurred in 25.7% of patients during the consolidation stage. Among the patients alive at 3 months following the diagnosis of cryptococcosis, 33.7% of patients exhibited graft dysfunction. Following cryptococcosis, 5 patients displayed T cell rejection and 4 patients developed antibody-mediated rejection. A total of 41 patients with cryptococcosis were matched to 246 controls (ratio 1:6), after a median follow-up of 52.3 [28.1-90.2] months, patients with cryptococcosis exhibited a higher risk of mortality with 35.9% compared with 9.8% (p < 0.001) and graft failure with 33.3% compared with 15.0% (p = 0.0005). Conclusion This study has shown that kidney injury manifests itself through a sequential, multi-step process that initially includes pre-renal impairment, ATN and iatrogenic mechanisms. Amphotericin B-related AKI, followed by tacrolimus overdose represent common causes of AKI.
ISSN:0931-0509
1460-2385
DOI:10.1093/ndt/gfae069.1033