To determine whether pregnancy had a long-term influence on the surviv
al or function of renal allografts, a case-control study was conducted
, Patients were selected from a pool of 915 patients transplanted at t
he University of Cincinnati from 1967 to 1990. The pregnancy group con
sisted of 18 women who became pregnant 3 months to 17 years after tran
splantation and who elected to continue pregnancy, There were 26 nonpr
egnant female controls, and 23 male control renal transplant recipient
s, Matching criteria were cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD), don
or source, age at transplantation, calendar year of transplantation, t
ime from transplantation to pregnancy, and serum creatinine concentrat
ion at the time corresponding to conception, Matching was performed by
one investigator, who had no knowledge of long-term outcome in any of
the patients, The three groups were well-matched with regard to these
criteria, Male controls had higher baseline creatinine clearances tha
n pregnancy cases or female controls, During pregnancy, serum creatini
ne levels fell by 20%, and creatinine clearance rose by 53%. Immediate
ly after pregnancy, these values returned to baseline. Graft survival,
with a mean posttransplant follow-up of 11-12 years, was 77.8% in the
pregnancy cases, 69.2% in the female controls, and 69.6% in the male
controls, By life-table analysis, none of these differences was signif
icant, Among surviving grafts, serum creatinine levels and creatinine
clearances remained stable throughout the follow-up period. In this st
udy, using well-matched male and nonpregnant female cohorts for compar
ison, pregnancy did not have an adverse long-term effect on renal allo
graft function or survival.