EVOLUTION OF DIABETIC NEPHROPATHY IN KIDNEY GRAFTS
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 59 (1) , 51-57
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-199501150-00010
Abstract
Thirty-six renal transplant biopsies were obtained from 20 diabetic patients 1-6.5 years after successful combined pancreatic and renal transplantation (PKtx).(1) An additional 36 renal transplant biopsies were obtained from 30 diabetic recipients 1-6.8 years after kidney transplantation only (Ktx). Light microscopic lesions indicating diabetic nephropathy were evaluated by a semiquantitative score ranging from 0 to 9. Within 2.5 years after transplantation, light microscopy showed no or only slight diabetic changes in both groups (nephropathy score = 0-2). Later, a nephropathy score greater than or equal to 3 was seen in only 1 of 15 biopsies (6.7%) in the combined PKtx group, but in 11 of 24 biopsies (45.8%) in the Ktx group (P<0.05). Twenty-eight of the biopsies from the PKtx group and 26 of them from the Ktx patients were examined with electron microscopic morphometry to evaluate the glomerular basement membrane thickness (BMT) and the relative volume of the mesangial tissue (V-v). Of the biopsies taken < 2 1/2 years after transplantation in PKtx patients, and of those similarly taken in the Ktx patients, 93.8% vs. 88.9% had BMT values within 2 SD of the normal (NS). Of the kidney biopsies taken greater than or equal to 2.5 years after transplantation, 91.7% in the PKtx group still had a normal BMT, while only 35.3% of the biopsies in the Ktx group had a normal BMT (P<0.01). In the PKtx group, the V-v was normal in 12/16 (75.0%) of the biopsies taken < 2 1/2 years after transplantation, and in 9/11 (81.8%) of the biopsies obtained greater than or equal to 2.5 years after transplantation. In contrast, the V-v was normal in only 1/9 (11.1%) and 2/17 (11.8%) of correspondingly obtained biopsies from Ktx patients (biopsies < 2.5 years after transplantation, P<0.01, and biopsies greater than or equal to 2.5 years after transplantation, P<0.001, respectively). We conclude that a functioning pancreatic transplant can prevent or reduce the various signs of diabetic nephropathy that eventually develop in diabetic patients with a kidney graft only.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
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