News

Pregnancy outcomes similar in kidney transplant patients, despite age


 

References

Pregnancy outcomes were similar for women who underwent kidney transplants in childhood and those who received transplants as adults, according to findings published Feb. 2 in JAMA Pediatrics.

Live births occurred in 76% of pregnancies in women who received kidney transplants as children, compared with 77% of pregnancies among women who received transplants as adults, wrote Melanie L. Wyld and her colleagues from Sydney Medical School in Australia.

76% of women who received kidney transplants as children had successful pregnancies. ©London_England/Thinkstockphotos.com

76% of women who received kidney transplants as children had successful pregnancies.

The study examined a total of 101 pregnancies in 66 women who received transplants before age 18 years, and 626 pregnancies in 401 women who were adults at the time of transplant.

Mean gestational age and prematurity incidence were also similar in the two groups, with child-transplant recipients having a mean gestational age of 35 weeks, and adult-transplant recipients having a mean gestational age of 36 weeks.

Incidence of prematurity was 45% in child-transplant mothers and 53% in adult-transplant mothers, the researchers reported.

“To our knowledge, this study is the first to look at pregnancy outcomes for women who received a kidney transplant as a child,” the researchers wrote. These results should “provide comfort to such mothers and their physicians that their early onset of kidney failure and longer period of posttransplant exposure to immunosuppression do not adversely affect their pregnancy outcomes,” they added.

Read the full article at: JAMA Pediatr. 2015;169(2):e143626. (doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2014.3626).

Recommended Reading

CKD guidelines elusive to many PCPs
MDedge ObGyn
Midurethral sling study: At 5 years satisfaction remained high, though continence declined
MDedge ObGyn
More than half of older women have experienced incontinence
MDedge ObGyn
Pelvic floor disorders prevalent in female triathletes
MDedge ObGyn
Guideline for overactive bladder adds new treatments
MDedge ObGyn
UTIs in type 2 diabetes can be costly
MDedge ObGyn
Kidney donors at greater risk of preeclampsia, gestational hypertension
MDedge ObGyn
Neither aspirin nor clonidine reduced postoperative acute kidney injury
MDedge ObGyn
Consider biopsy for active lupus nephritis in pregnancy
MDedge ObGyn
FDA approves IV antibacterial for complicated UTIs, abdominal infections
MDedge ObGyn