Volume 11, Issue 5pt2 pp. 476-479
Original Article

Hepatitis antigenemia and survival after renal transplantation

William W. Pfaff

Corresponding Author

William W. Pfaff

Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, Florida

William W. Pfaff, MD, Department of Surgery, University of Florida, PO Box 100286, Gainesville, Florida 32610-0286, USASearch for more papers by this author
John W. Blanton

John W. Blanton

South-Eastern Organ Procurement Foundation, Richmond, Virginia

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 01 October 1997
Citations: 12

Abstract

Some transplant programs regard hepatitis B antigenemia (HBsAg+) as a contraindication to renal transplantation. We studied the records of 13,287 renal transplant recipients, 781 (5.88%) who were positive for HBsAg, the remainder negative (HBsAg-). Patient survival for HBsAg-recipients is 91.8% at 1 year, 80.6% at 5 years, and 65.8% at 10 years. Patient survival for HBsAg+ recipients was 88.8% at 1 year, 77.6% at 5 years, and 61.6% at 10 years. The difference in patient survival was 3-4%, and graft survival was nearly constant at 3%. The statistical significance for patient survival was p = 0.02 by the log-rank test and p = 0.007 by the Wilcoxon test. There is far more statistical power (p = 0.0001) in other risk factors such as transplant number, recipient race, recipient age, and diabetes. Currently available diagnostic studies may allow better risk stratification of HBsAg+ candidates. We believe that hepatitis antigenemia without added and related risk factors has only a mild effect on graft and patient outcome.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.