From the Journals

HIV+ patients get good outcomes after kidney or liver transplant


 

Liver transplant patient survival similar

In terms of liver transplant outcomes, among 83 HIV-positive recipients who were propensity-matched with 468 HIV-negative recipients, the mean age was about 53 and about 66% were male.

The patient survival rates at 15 years were not significantly different between the groups, at 70% for HIV-positive and 75.7% for HIV-negative, (P = .12).

Similar to the kidney transplant recipients, the worst survival among all liver transplant subgroups was among HIV-HCV co-infected patients prior to access to HCV direct-acting antivirals in 2014, with a 5-year survival of 59.5% (P = .04).

“Since the advent of HCV direct-acting antivirals, liver transplant outcomes in HCV mono-infected patients are comparable to HCV/HIV co-infected recipients,” Dr. Stock said.

Acute rejection rates higher with HIV-positivity versus national averages

The rates of acute rejection at 1 year in the kidney and liver transplant, HIV-positive groups – at about 20% and 30%, respectively – were, however, higher than national average incidence rates of about 10% at 1 year.

Long-term data on those patients showed the acute rejection affected graft survival outcomes with kidney transplant recipients: HIV-positive kidney transplant recipients who had at least one episode of acute rejection had a graft survival of just 52.8% at 15 years post-transplant, compared with 91.8% among recipients without acute rejection.

Such differences were not observed among HIV-positive liver transplant recipients.

The authors note that the increased risk of acute rejection in HIV-positive kidney transplant patients is consistent with previous studies, with causes that may be multifactorial.

Top theories include drug interactions with protease inhibitors, resulting in some centers transitioning HIV-infected patients from those regimens to integrase-based regimens prior to transplant.

“The management and prevention of acute rejection in HIV-positive kidney transplant [patients] will therefore continue to be a key component in the care of these patients,” the authors note in their study.

The study was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health. The study authors and Dr. Klassen have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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