Kidney transplantation after pelvic radiotherapy: increased morbidity?

Kidney transplantation pelvic irradiation prostatic adenocarcinoma radiotherapy

Journal

The French journal of urology
ISSN: 2950-3930
Titre abrégé: Fr J Urol
Pays: France
ID NLM: 9918752079106676

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
05 Jun 2024
Historique:
received: 05 09 2023
revised: 29 05 2024
accepted: 31 05 2024
medline: 8 6 2024
pubmed: 8 6 2024
entrez: 7 6 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

The impact of pelvic irradiation on kidney transplant surgery is still unclear. The main objective of our study is to evaluate the feasibility and the saftety of renal transplantation following pelvic radiotherapy. We collected characteristics and kidney transplant data from patients with a history of pelvic cancer treated with pelvic irradiation between 2005 and 2021. These data were collected via the prospective information system "Computerized Data Validated in Transplantation" (DIVAT) and medical records. We carried out a comparative study with a non-irradiated matched control group to compare the data of intraoperative surgeries, complications reported postoperatively as well as survival of the graft and the patient. Patients were matched on age, sex, side of graft implantation, and graft rank. 24 patients were collected with an average age of 65, 18 patients were treated for prostatic adenocarcinoma, 4 for gynecological cancer and 2 testicular cancers. 21 patients were treated by radiotherapy, 3 by brachytherapy. 8 patients had a target dose on the iliac lymph nodes. The comparative study showed a significant difference in operative difficulty (n=15 versus n=1 p<0.01), operative duration (190min versus 149min p=0.005), occurrence of lymphocele (p=0.041). Urinary anastomosis surgical techniques were different, 83.3% of control patients had a ureterovesical anastomosis against 58.3% of patients with a history of irradiation (p=0.057) and about 29% of irradiated patients had an uretero-ureteral anastomosis. There was no other significant difference in per and postoperative criteria or survival. A history of pelvic irradiation significantly increases the technical complexity of kidney transplantation without impacting saftey and kidney graft survival.An history of Pelvic irradiation should not be a contraindication to kidney transplant.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38849036
pii: S2950-3930(24)00124-4
doi: 10.1016/j.fjurol.2024.102667
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

102667

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.

Auteurs

Marc Françot (M)

Department of Urology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France. Electronic address: marc_francot@hotmail.fr.

Benoit Mesnard (B)

Department of Urology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France.

Clarisse Kerleau (C)

Center for Research in Transplantation and Translational Immunology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France.

Ismael Chelghaf (I)

Department of Urology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France.

Stéphane de Vergie (S)

Department of Urology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France.

Marie Aimée Perrouin Verbe (MA)

Department of Urology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France.

J Rigaud (J)

Department of Urology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France.

G Karam (G)

Department of Urology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France.

Supiot Stéphane (S)

Department of Radiotherapy, West Cancer institute, Nantes University Hospital, Saint-Herblain, France.

Emmanuel Rio (E)

Department of Radiotherapy, West Cancer institute, Nantes University Hospital, Saint-Herblain, France.

Gilles Blancho (G)

Department of nephrology and immunology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France.

Magali Giral (M)

Department of nephrology and immunology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France.

Julien Branchereau (J)

Department of Urology, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France. Electronic address: julien.branchereau@chu-nantes.fr.

Classifications MeSH