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Post-Transplant Complications

Organ transplantation is life-saving but comes with significant risks of complications.

Early (Days to Weeks):

Surgical complications Primary graft dysfunction Acute rejection Infections (bacterial, fungal)

Intermediate (Weeks to Months):

Acute rejection Opportunistic infections (CMV, PCP) Drug toxicity

Late (Months to Years):

Chronic rejection Malignancies Cardiovascular disease Metabolic complications Chronic infections

Major Categories of Complications

Rejection

Hyperacute Rejection:

Occurs within minutes to hours Pre-formed antibodies against donor antigens Rare with modern crossmatching Results in immediate graft loss Treatment: Graft removal, plasmapheresis

Acute Rejection:

Most common in first 6 months Cell-mediated (T-cell) or antibody-mediated (AMR) Incidence: 10-30% depending on organ and immunosuppression

Signs/symptoms vary by organ:

Kidney: rising creatinine, decreased urine output Liver: elevated liver enzymes, jaundice Heart: fatigue, arrhythmias, heart failure Lung: dyspnea, decreased oxygen saturation

Diagnosis:

Biopsy Rising biomarkers (creatinine, liver enzymes Donor-specific antibodies (DSA)

Treatment:

High-dose corticosteroids (pulse methylprednisolone) Thymoglobulin (ATG) for steroid-resistant rejection Plasmapheresis + IVIG for antibody-mediated rejection Rituximab, bortezomib for severe AMR

Chronic Rejection:

Occurs months to years post-transplant Progressive, often irreversible organ dysfunction Manifests differently by organ: Kidney: transplant glomerulopathy, interstitial fibrosis Liver: vanishing bile duct syndrome Heart: cardiac allograft vasculopathy Lung: bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome

Risk factors for post transplant rejection:

Prior acute chronic rejection episodes Non-adherence to immunosuppression Donor-specific antibodies CMV infection HLA mismatches

Management: Optimize immunosuppression May require retransplantation in severe cases

Infections

Transplant recipients are at high risk due to immunosuppression. Bacterial Infections:

Early (first month): Surgical site infections Pneumonia Urinary tract infections Catheter-related bloodstream infections

Later: Encapsulated organisms (especially post-splenectomy) Listeria, Nocardia in heavily immunosuppressed Viral Infections: Cytomegalovirus (CMV): Most common opportunistic infections peak: 1-6 months post-transplant Risk highest in CMV-negative recipient with CMV-positive donor (D+/R-) Manifestations: fever, leukopenia, organ-specific disease (pneumonitis, colitis, hepatitis) Prevention: Valganciclovir prophylaxis 3-6 months Treatment: IV ganciclovir or oral valganciclovir

Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) Risk for post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD) Monitor EBV PCR levels May require reduction in immunosuppression

BK Virus:Polyoma virus Primarily affects kidney transplants Causes BK nephropathy Monitor BK PCR in urine and blood Treatment: reduction of immunosuppression

Other viruses: Herpes simplex, varicella-zoster (prophylaxis with acyclovir/valacyclovir) COVID-19 (higher morbidity/mortality) Hepatitis B/C reactivation

Fungal Infections:

Common organisms:

Candida (early, often catheter-related) Aspergillus (lung transplant recipients especially) Pneumocystis jirovecii (PCP) Cryptococcus Endemic fungi (histoplasmosis, coccidioidomycosis)

Prevention:

Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole for PCP prophylaxis (lifelong) Antifungal prophylaxis in high-risk patients

Parasitic:

Toxoplasmosis, especially heart transplants Strongyloides can cause hyperinfection syndrome

Immunosuppression-Related Complications

Calcineurin Inhibitors (Tacrolimus, Cyclosporine):

Nephrotoxicity

Most significant long-term complication Progressive chronic kidney disease Monitor levels, consider CNI-sparing protocols

Neurotoxicity

Tremor, headaches Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) Seizures

Metabolic

New-onset diabetes after transplant (NODAT) – 10-40% incidence Hypertension Hyperlipidemia Hyperkalemia, hypomagnesemia

mTOR Inhibitors (Sirolimus, Everolimus):

Delayed wound healing Mouth ulcers Hyperlipidemia Cytopenias (especially thrombocytopenia) Proteinuria Pneumonitis

Mycophenolate:

Gastrointestinal symptoms (diarrhea, nausea) Bone marrow suppression (leukopenia, anemia)

Corticosteroids:

Osteoporosis Avascular necrosis (especially hip) Weight gain, cushingoid features Hyperglycemia Mood changes, insomnia Cataracts, glaucoma

Malignancies

Significantly increased risk (2-4 times general population).

Post-Transplant Lymphoproliferative Disorder (PTLD):

EBV-associated B-cell lymphoma Incidence: 1-20% depending on organ and baseline EBV status Higher risk with heavy immunosuppression, EBV-negative recipients Presentation: lymphadenopathy, organ infiltration, CNS involvement Treatment: reduce immunosuppression, rituximab, chemotherapy

Skin Cancers:

65-fold increased risk of squamous cell carcinoma 10-fold increased risk of basal cell carcinoma Due to UV exposure + immunosuppression Prevention: sun protection, annual dermatology screening Risk increases with mTOR inhibitors less than calcineurin Inhibitors

Other Solid Tumors:

Kidney cancer (native kidneys, especially in ADPKD) Lung cancer Liver cancer Colorectal cancer Kaposi sarcoma (HHV-8 associated)

Cardiovascular Complications Leading cause of late mortality.

Risk factors Pre-existing disease Immunosuppression effects (hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia Chronic inflammation Chronic kidney disease

Manifestations:

Coronary artery disease Heart failure Cardiac allograft vasculopathy (heart transplants) Stroke Peripheral vascular disease

Prevention of post transplant CV complications:

Aggressive cardiovascular risk factor management Statins Blood pressure control Diabetes management Smoking cessation

Metabolic Complications

New-Onset Diabetes After Transplant

Incidence: 10-40% Risk factors: tacrolimus, steroids, obesity, hepatitis C Managed like type 2 diabetes May improve with steroid minimization

Bone Disease: Osteoporosis (steroids, CNIs) Avascular necrosis (steroids)

Prevention: calcium, vitamin D, bisphosphonates

Hyperlipidemia:

Very common (50-70%) Treatment: statins

Obesity: Weight gain common post-transplant Increases cardiovascular and metabolic risks

Kidney Transplant: Ureteral complications (stricture, leak) Renal artery stenosis Lymphocele Recurrent native kidney disease

Liver Transplant: Hepatic artery thrombosis is the most serious vascular complication. Biliary complications of strictures, and leaks Portal vein thrombosis Recurrent hepatitis C or autoimmune disease

Heart Transplant:

Cardiac allograft vasculopathy Right heart failure Pericardial effusion Arrhythmias

Lung Transplant:

Bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome with chronic rejection Airway complications (stenosis, dehiscence) Highest infection risk of all solid organs Primary graft dysfunction

Medication-Related Issues Non-adherence: Major cause of late acute rejection and graft loss Occurs in 20-50% of patients Risk factors: psychiatric illness, substance abuse, cost, complexity of regimen

Drug Interactions:

Many common medications affect immunosuppressant levels CYP3A4 interactions particularly important Grapefruit juice, St. John’s wort contraindicated

Vaccinations:

Complete before transplant when possible Avoid live vaccines post-transplant Annual influenza vaccine Pneumococcal, COVID-19, others per guidelines

Lifestyle:

Sun protection Smoking cessation Healthy diet and exercise Medication adherence

Graft survival varies by organ (approximate 5-year rates)

Kidney: 70-80% Liver: 70-75% Heart: 70-75% Lung: 50-60% (lowest due to chronic rejection)

Patient survival generally

80-90% at 5 years for most solid organs Continues to improve with better immunosuppression and complication management

The key to successful long-term outcomes is balancing adequate immunosuppression to prevent rejection while minimizing infection risk and other complications.

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