Abstract

Kidney-pancreas transplantation is the preferable therapeutic option for patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus and end-stage kidney disease. We describe the case of a 35-year-old pancreas-kidney transplant recipient with dual-graft failure that presents with massive hematochezia and hemodynamic instability, evolving into hemorrhagic shock. The diagnostic assessment revealed a fistula between a pseudoaneurysm of the right common iliac artery and the adjacent transplanted duodenum segment, a rare but life-threatening cause of gastrointestinal bleeding in these patients. An endoprosthesis was placed into the iliac artery, prophylactic antibiotics were instituted, and a pancreatic transplantectomy was performed in a second procedure. This case highlights that the diagnostic workup of gastrointestinal bleeding in pancreas-kidney transplant recipients must include the possibility of arterio-enteric fistulas, which is more frequent in the presence of pancreatic graft failure, as was the case of our patient. Endovascular exclusion is the advocated treatment. Pancreatic graft transplantectomy could also be a possible approach for patients with a failed pancreas but it is highly controversial due to potential risks.

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