Abstract
Chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) characterized by interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy is a major cause of renal transplant failure. The diagnosis can currently only be verified by a graft biopsy. To evaluate whether non-invasive dynamic color Doppler sonographic parenchymal perfusion measurements are different in grafts with various degrees of biopsy proven renal transplant fibrosis. Forty-nine adult patients were prospectively included. Four patients were excluded. Color Doppler videos from the renal cortex were recorded. Perfusion in the renal cortex was evaluated using a software package which calculates color pixel area and flow velocity, encoded by each pixel inside a region of interest of a video sequence. The software calculates parameters that describe tissue perfusion numerically. Two of these, the perfusion intensity and tissue pulsatility index, were compared to grade of interstitial fibrosis (0-3) in biopsies. Observer agreement was evaluated in a subset of 12 patients. Of the 45 patients analyzed, 18 patients had grade 0, 18 had grade 1, seven had grade 2 and two had grade 3 fibrosis. The mean perfusion intensity of grade 0 was significantly higher than that of grade 2 and 3 fibrosis in the proximal cortical layer (1.65 m/s vs. 0.84 m/s, P = 0.008). No significant difference was found between grade 0 and grade 1 fibrosis. Perfusion intensity was correlated to estimated glomerular filtration rate (Pearson r 0.51, P = 0.001, R(2) = 0.26 and 0.46, P = 0.001, R(2) = 0.22 in the distal and proximal cortex, respectively). Inter-observer agreement of the perfusion intensity, expressed as intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.69 in the proximal part of the cortex. Intra-observer agreement was 0.85 for observer 1 and 0.82 for observer 2. Perfusion intensity assessed by dynamic color Doppler measurements is significantly reduced in allografts with grade 2 and 3 fibrosis compared to allografts without fibrosis. Further studies involving longitudinal assessment of allografts undergoing protocol biopsies would be of interest.
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