Renal Transplantation in the Amyloidosis of Familial Mediterranean Fever
- 1 October 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 139 (10) , 1135-1138
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.1979.03630470047016
Abstract
Ten patients with familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) and histologically confirmed amyloidosis received cadaver kidney transplants for treatment of terminal renal disease. Colchicine, 1 mg daily, was included in the routine postoperative regimen from 1974 for amyloidotic patients. Graft and patient survival were compared with ten nonamyloidotic recipients of renal grafts matched for age, sex, type of allograft, and HLA compatibility. In the FMF group, five of ten grafts have survived from 20 to 64 months; in the control group, six of ten. While only recipients with functioning grafts survived in the FMF group, patient survival in the control group is eight of ten after one year. In all five FMF survivors, graft function is satisfactory, proteinuria is absent, and blood creatinine levels are normal. Amyloid involvement of an allograft was documented 16 months after transplantation in the only patient whose maintenance colchicine dosage had been reduced to 0.5 mg daily. (Arch Intern Med139:1135-1138, 1979)This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- TRANSPLANTATION FOR RENAL AMYLOIDOSISTransplantation, 1977
- Renal transplantation in congenital and metabolic diseases. A report from the ASC/NIH renal transplant registryJAMA, 1975
- Prophylactic Colchicine Therapy in Familial Mediterranean FeverAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1974
- BLOCKAGE OF AMYLOID INDUCTION BY COLCHICINE IN AN ANIMAL MODELThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1974
- Colchicine for Familial Mediterranean FeverNew England Journal of Medicine, 1972