Paulamy Ganguly, Ramya Varadarajan, Max W. Adelman, Priya Arunachalam, Simon Yau, Jihad G. Youssef, Ahmad Goodarzi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Historically, patients with human immunodeficiency virus (PWH) were at higher risk for pulmonary morbidities than patients without HIV. Lung transplantation in PWH has been limited by uncertain outcomes and a lack of guidelines for transplantation and immunosuppression. However, several case reports in the United States and Europe have demonstrated that lung transplantation in PWH is feasible. Although there remain concerns regarding these patients as higher-risk recipients, lung transplantation is feasible with careful modification of immunosuppression and close monitoring.
Methods
We performed lung transplantation on three PWHs and analyzed their post-transplant outcomes to determine the feasibility of lung transplant in PWH.
Results
We found that all three patients (mean age 59, SD 10.98) with HIV underwent lung transplantation. Two of the three patients experienced acute cellular rejection that resolved with intravenous corticosteroids. None had long-term complications including chronic rejection, antibody-mediated rejection, or infections. All three patients maintained baseline HIV therapy following transplantation with adequate HIV disease control.
Conclusion
Although PWH has an increased risk of pulmonary comorbidities compared to the general population, lung transplantation appears to be a feasible treatment option supported by the growing body of literature and the three cases described here.
期刊介绍:
Clinical Transplantation: The Journal of Clinical and Translational Research aims to serve as a channel of rapid communication for all those involved in the care of patients who require, or have had, organ or tissue transplants, including: kidney, intestine, liver, pancreas, islets, heart, heart valves, lung, bone marrow, cornea, skin, bone, and cartilage, viable or stored.
Published monthly, Clinical Transplantation’s scope is focused on the complete spectrum of present transplant therapies, as well as also those that are experimental or may become possible in future. Topics include:
Immunology and immunosuppression;
Patient preparation;
Social, ethical, and psychological issues;
Complications, short- and long-term results;
Artificial organs;
Donation and preservation of organ and tissue;
Translational studies;
Advances in tissue typing;
Updates on transplant pathology;.
Clinical and translational studies are particularly welcome, as well as focused reviews. Full-length papers and short communications are invited. Clinical reviews are encouraged, as well as seminal papers in basic science which might lead to immediate clinical application. Prominence is regularly given to the results of cooperative surveys conducted by the organ and tissue transplant registries.
Clinical Transplantation: The Journal of Clinical and Translational Research is essential reading for clinicians and researchers in the diverse field of transplantation: surgeons; clinical immunologists; cryobiologists; hematologists; gastroenterologists; hepatologists; pulmonologists; nephrologists; cardiologists; and endocrinologists. It will also be of interest to sociologists, psychologists, research workers, and to all health professionals whose combined efforts will improve the prognosis of transplant recipients.