THE 1994 ANNUAL-REPORT OF THE NORTH-AMERICAN PEDIATRIC RENAL-TRANSPLANT COOPERATIVE STUDY

Citation
Ec. Kohaut et A. Tejani, THE 1994 ANNUAL-REPORT OF THE NORTH-AMERICAN PEDIATRIC RENAL-TRANSPLANT COOPERATIVE STUDY, Pediatric nephrology, 10(4), 1996, pp. 422-434
Citations number
19
Categorie Soggetti
Pediatrics,"Urology & Nephrology
Journal title
Pediatric nephrology
ISSN journal
0931041X → ACNP
Volume
10
Issue
4
Year of publication
1996
Pages
422 - 434
Database
ISI
SICI code
0931-041X(1996)10:4<422:T1AOTN>2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
The North American Pediatric Renal Transplant Cooperative Study (NAPRT CS) is a research effort that was organized and initiated in 1987, The following manuscript is the 1994 NAPRTCS annual report which has summ arized data that has been voluntarily contributed by 83 centers, The r eport includes data on 3,183 patients who have undergone a total of 3, 445 renal transplants between 1 January 1987 and 18 February 1994 when the data set was closed. The report also contains data on 1,611 indep endent courses of dialysis which were initiated between 1 January 1992 and 18 February 1994, This report is meant to update the previous NAP RTCS annual reports as well as demonstrate how the NAPRTCS database ha s changed clinical practice since its inception, There have been 855 g raft failures among the 3,438 transplants, Due to the maturing of the database, chronic rejection now accounts for 34% of graft failures whi ch have occurred over the last year, Graft failure was increased in re cipients if the recipients were <2 years of age, of the black race, or had received five or more prior transfusions, Early treatment with an tithymocyte globulin/antilymphocyte globulin/OKT3 was associated with increased graft survival, Catch-up growth post transplant was only see n in the youngest patients (< 6 years of age), Those patients >6 years did not have catch-up growth post transplant, Overall graft survival has improved markedly since the inception of this study, The dialysis database is just maturing and the data confirm that growth on dialysis continues to be very poor, The 1994 annual report of NAPRTCS extends previous findings of this valuable database, It is gratifying to know that early findings of NAPRTCS have led to changes in therapy which ha ve led to improvement in the care of these very special children.