Abstract
In adult renal transplant recipients, reports have shown continuing mortality beyond 5 years after transplantation with the majority of deaths due to myocardial infarctions, malignancies, and liver failure. Little information is available on the long-term survival of children following renal transplantation. Children with end-stage renal disease have fewer systemic complications than adults and should have better long-term survival. Furthermore, analysis of mortality in the pediatric population should be more informative of the risks of renal transplantation, separate from underlying pretransplant diseases and the inherent complications of aging. We analyzed, therefore, the long-term mortality of renal transplant recipients in a single pediatric center. A total of 299 renal transplants were performed in 251 patients from 1971 through 1990. No patient was excluded from the evaluation. Over all, actuarial survival was 91% at 1 year, 83% at 10 years, and 81% at 15 years. Patient's age at transplantation, donor source, and number of previous allografts were not correlated with patient survival. There were 35 deaths with 51% attributable to infections. The majority of deaths (71%) occurred within the first 6 months after renal transplantation during the period of greatest immunosuppression. Mortality within the first 12 months following renal transplantation was higher during the period 1971-1974 when compared to subsequent years. These data demonstrate that in a pediatric renal transplant center, long-term patient survival is excellent. Most deaths occur within the first 6 months following renal transplantation and are caused by infections. As expected, long-term survival in children is better than reports in adult renal transplant recipients and may more accurately reflect true renal-transplant-related mortality.
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