Posttransplantation diabetes mellitus (PTDM) is a complication arising mostly during the first 6 months after kidney transplantation. Considering the serious outcomes of chronic hyperglycemia in kidney transplant patients, the recognition of factors that contribute to the onset of PTDM is of particular relevance. A retrospective analysis was performed to document the incidence of and the risk factors for diabetes mellitus occurring in the first year after kidney transplantation among 177 adult patients, without previously known diabetes transplanted between January 1998 and December 2000. PTDM, defined as fasting plasma glucose ≥ 126 mg/dL confirmed by repeat testing on a different day, occurred in 48 (27.12%) patients of whom 36 showed transient changes during the first year after transplantation. Univariate analysis identified variables to be associated with the onset of PTDM: older recipient age ( P = .05), male gender ( P = .03), family history of diabetes ( P = .04), advanced donor age ( P = .008), absence of induction immunosuppression ( P = .04), use of tacrolimus (vs cyclosporine; P = .01), one or more than one (steroid-treated) acute rejection episode(s) ( P = .000001), cytomegalovirus infection ( P = .02), and use of beta-blockers or diuretics ( P = .05). By multivariate analysis, five factors were independently associated with the onset of PTDM: two episodes of rejection (odds ratio = 42.69, P = .000025), one episode of rejection (5.01, P = .007), older recipient age (1.06, P = .017), family history of diabetes (7.24, P = .011), and weight at transplantation (1.03, P = .048). Tacrolimus treatment remained of borderline significance (2.77, P = .05). In addition to traditional risk factors predisposing to the development of type 2 diabetes in the general population, episodes of acute rejection significantly influence the incidence of PTDM.
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