The Perspectives of General Nephrologists Toward Transitions of Care and Management of Failing Kidney Transplants. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • The management of failing kidney allograft and transition of care to general nephrologists (GN) remain a complex process. The Kidney Pancreas Community of Practice (KPCOP) Failing Allograft Workgroup designed and distributed a survey to GN between May and September 2021. Participants were invited via mail and email invitations. There were 103 respondents with primarily adult nephrology practices, of whom 41% had an academic affiliation. More than 60% reported listing for a second kidney as the most important concern in caring for patients with a failing allograft, followed by immunosuppression management (46%) and risk of mortality (38%), while resistant anemia was considered less of a concern. For the initial approach to immunosuppression reduction, 60% stop antimetabolites first, and 26% defer to the transplant nephrologist. Communicating with transplant centers about immunosuppression cessation was reported to occur always by 60%, and sometimes by 29%, while 12% reported making the decision independently. Nephrologists with academic appointments communicate with transplant providers more than private nephrologists (74% vs. 49%, p = 0.015). There are heterogeneous approaches to the care of patients with a failing allograft. Efforts to strengthen transitions of care and to develop practical practice guidelines are needed to improve the outcomes of this vulnerable population.

authors

  • Alhamad, Tarek
  • Murad, Haris
  • Dadhania, Darshana M
  • Pavlakis, Martha
  • Parajuli, Sandesh
  • Concepcion, Beatrice P
  • Singh, Neeraj
  • Murakami, Naoka
  • Casey, Michael J
  • Ji, Mengmeng
  • Lubetzky, Michelle
  • Tantisattamo, Ekamol
  • Alomar, Omar
  • Faravardeh, Arman
  • Blosser, Christopher D
  • Basu, Arpita
  • Gupta, Gaurav
  • Adler, Joel T
  • Adey, Deborah
  • Woodside, Kenneth J
  • Ong, Song C
  • Parsons, Ronald F
  • Lentine, Krista L

publication date

  • June 30, 2023

Research

keywords

  • Kidney Transplantation
  • Nephrology

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC10348051

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84905828429

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1097/TP.0000000000000057

PubMed ID

  • 37456682

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 36