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Quantitative Evaluation of Acute Renal Transplant Dysfunction with Low-Dose Three-dimensional MR Renography

Yamamoto A; Zhang JL; Rusinek H; Chandarana H; Vivier PH; Babb JS; Diflo T; John DG; Benstein JA; Barisoni L; Stoffel DR; Lee VS
Purpose: To assess prospectively the ability of quantitative low-dose three-dimensional magnetic resonance (MR) renography to help identify the cause of acute graft dysfunction. Materials and Methods: This HIPAA-compliant study was approved by the institutional review board, and written informed consent was obtained. Between December 2001 and May 2009, sixty patients with transplanted kidneys (41 men and 19 women; mean age, 49 years; age range, 22-71 years) were included. Thirty-one patients had normal function and 29 had acute dysfunction due to acute rejection (n = 12), acute tubular necrosis (ATN) (n = 8), chronic rejection (n = 6), or drug toxicity (n = 3). MR renography was performed at 1.5 T with three-dimensional gradient-echo imaging. With use of a multicompartment renal model, the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and the mean transit time (MTT) of the tracer for the vascular compartment (MTT(A)), the tubular compartment (MTT(T)), and the collecting system compartment (MTT(C)) were calculated. Also derived was MTT for the whole kidney (MTT(K) = MTT(A) + MTT(T) + MTT(C)) and fractional MTT of each compartment (MTT(A/K) = MTT(A)/MTT(K), MTT(T/K) = MTT(T)/MTT(K), MTT(C/K) = MTT(C)/MTT(K)). These parameters were compared in patients in the different study groups. Statistical analysis was performed by using analysis of covariance. Results: There were significant differences in GFR and MTT(K) between the acute dysfunction group (36.4 mL/min +/- 20.8 [standard deviation] and 177.1 seconds +/- 46.8, respectively) and the normal function group (65.9 mL/min +/- 27.6 and 140.5 seconds +/- 51.8, respectively) (P < .001 and P = .004). The MTT(A/K) was significantly higher in the acute rejection group (mean, 12.7% +/- 2.9) than in the normal function group (mean, 8.3% +/- 2.2; P < .001) or in the ATN group (mean, 7.1% +/- 1.4; P < .001). The MTT(T/K) was significantly higher in the ATN group (mean, 83.2% +/- 9.2) than in the normal function group (mean, 72.4% +/- 10.2; P = .031) or in the acute rejection group (mean, 69.2% +/- 6.1; P = .003). Conclusion: Low-dose MR renography analyzed by using a multicompartmental tracer kinetic renal model may help to differentiate noninvasively between acute rejection and ATN after kidney transplantation. (c) RSNA, 2011
PMCID:3157004
PMID: 21771953
ISSN: 1527-1315
CID: 135365

Kidney function: glomerular filtration rate measurement with MR renography in patients with cirrhosis

Vivier, Pierre-Hugues; Storey, Pippa; Rusinek, Henry; Zhang, Jeff L; Yamamoto, Akira; Tantillo, Kristopher; Khan, Umer; Lim, Ruth P; Babb, James S; John, Devon; Teperman, Lewis W; Chandarana, Hersh; Friedman, Kent; Benstein, Judith A; Skolnik, Edward Y; Lee, Vivian S
PURPOSE: To assess the accuracy of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) measurements obtained with low-contrast agent dose dynamic contrast material-enhanced magnetic resonance (MR) renography in patients with liver cirrhosis who underwent routine liver MR imaging, with urinary clearance of technetium 99m ((99m)Tc) pentetic acid (DTPA) as the reference standard. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This HIPAA-compliant study was institutional review board approved. Written informed patient consent was obtained. Twenty patients with cirrhosis (14 men, six women; age range, 41-70 years; mean age, 54.6 years) who were scheduled for routine 1.5-T liver MR examinations to screen for hepatocellular carcinoma during a 6-month period were prospectively included. Five-minute MR renography with a 3-mL dose of gadoteridol was performed instead of a routine test-dose timing examination. The GFR was estimated at MR imaging with use of two kinetic models. In one model, only the signal intensities in the aorta and kidney parenchyma were considered, and in the other, renal cortical and medullary signal intensities were treated separately. The GFR was also calculated by using serum creatinine levels according to the Cockcroft-Gault and modification of diet in renal disease (MDRD) formulas. All patients underwent a (99m)Tc-DTPA urinary clearance examination on the same day to obtain a reference GFR measurement. The accuracies of all MR- and creatinine-based GFR estimations were compared by using Wilcoxon signed rank tests. RESULTS: The mean reference GFR, based on (99m)Tc-DTPA clearance, was 74.9 mL/min/1.73 m(2) +/- 27.7 (standard deviation) (range, 10.3-120.7 mL/min/1.73 m(2)). With both kinetic models, 95% of MR-based GFRs were within 30% of the reference values, whereas only 40% and 60% of Cockcroft-Gault- and MDRD-based GFRs, respectively, were within this range. MR-based GFR estimates were significantly more accurate than creatinine level-based estimates (P < .001). CONCLUSION: GFR assessment with MR imaging, which outperformed the Cockcroft-Gault and MDRD formulas, adds less than 10 minutes of table time to a clinically indicated liver MR examination without ionizing radiation. Supplemental material: http://radiology.rsna.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1148/radiol.11101338/-/DC1
PMID: 21386050
ISSN: 1527-1315
CID: 134249

GLOMERULAR FILTRATION RATE IN CIRRHOTIC PATIENTS BY MR RENOGRAPHY [Meeting Abstract]

Vivier, Pierre-Hugues; Storey, Pippa; Rusinek, Henry; Zhang, Jeff L.; Yamamoto, Akira; Tantillo, Kristopher; Lim, Ruth P.; Khan, Umer A.; Babb, James; John, Devon G.; Teperman, Lewis W.; Friedman, Kent P.; Benstein, Judith; Skolnik, Edward; Lee, Vivian S.
ISI:000288775601664
ISSN: 0270-9139
CID: 130850

Comparison of heparin-coated and conventional split-tip hemodialysis catheters

Clark, Timothy W I; Jacobs, David; Charles, Hearns W; Kovacs, Sandor; Aquino, Theresa; Erinjeri, Joseph; Benstein, Judith A
Catheter coatings have the potential to decrease infection and thrombosis in patients with chronic dialysis catheters. We report our midterm experience with a heparin-coated dialysis catheter. This retrospective, case-control study was approved by our Institutional Review Board. A total of 88 tunneled dialysis catheters were inserted over a 13-month period via the internal jugular vein. Thirty-eight uncoated split-tip catheters and 50 heparin-coated catheters were inserted. Primary catheter patency was compared between the two groups using the log rank test, with infection and/or thrombosis considered as catheter failures. Dialysis parameters during the first and last dialysis sessions, including pump speed, actual blood flow, and arterial port pressures, were compared using unpaired t-tests. Primary patency of the uncoated catheters was 86.0 +/- 6.5% at 30 days and 76.1 +/- 8.9% at 90 days. Primary patency of heparin-coated catheters was 92.0 +/- 6.2% at 30 days and 81.6 +/- 8.0% at 90 days (p = 0.87, log rank test). Infection requiring catheter removal occurred in four patients with uncoated catheters and two patients with heparin-coated catheters (p = 0.23). Catheter thrombosis requiring catheter replacement or thrombolysis occurred in one patient with an uncoated catheter and two patients with heparin-coated catheters (p = 0.9). No differences in catheter function during hemodialysis were seen between the two groups. In conclusion, the heparin-coated catheter did not show a significantly longer patency compared to the uncoated catheter. The flow characteristics of this device were comparable to those of the conventional uncoated catheter. A demonstrable benefit of the heparin-coated catheter in randomized trials is needed before a recommendation for routine implementation can be made
PMID: 19488816
ISSN: 1432-086x
CID: 100609

Acute leukaemia following renal transplantation [Case Report]

Subar, M; Gucalp, R; Benstein, J; Williams, G; Wiernik, P H
Four renal transplant patients on immunosuppressive therapy who presented with acute myeloid leukaemia are described. In two cases, azathioprine may have played an important role as a cofactor in leukaemogenesis. In a third case, the alkylating agent cyclophosphamide may have contributed. All patients were treated for leukaemia with full doses of cytotoxic chemotherapy and, in each case, a functioning renal allograft was preserved throughout the treatment despite attenuation of immunosuppressive therapy. Three patients achieved complete remission. Of the three, one is surviving at 2 years and two expired during the pancytopenic phase of their treatment with no active leukaemia present, and with intact renal function. As increasing expertise in the field of organ transplantation allows patients to survive longer, such patients' exposure to immunosuppressive and potentially leukaemogenic drugs is prolonged. The risk of secondary neoplasia has been previously documented in this population. Two of the four cases reported here suffered from polycystic kidney disease as their underlying condition. While this report suggests that the leukaemias are related to renal transplantation, we cannot rule out an association with the underlying disease which led to the transplant. This report further suggests that the leukaemia that develops in such patients may respond to standard therapy, and that such treatment does not compromise the transplanted kidney.
PMID: 8869934
ISSN: 1357-0560
CID: 862242

Salt restriction inhibits renal growth and stabilizes injury in rats with established renal disease

Dworkin, L D; Benstein, J A; Tolbert, E; Feiner, H D
Salt restriction inhibits renal growth and stabilizes injury in rats with established renal disease. Male Munich-Wistar rats that underwent right nephrectomy and segmental infarction of two thirds of the left kidney were fed standard chow for 4 wk and then randomly assigned to ingest standard or low-salt chow for an additional 4 wk. Four wk after ablation, rats had systemic hypertension, proteinuria, and glomerular sclerosis. The prevalence of sclerosis, protein excretion rate, and glomerular volume increased between the fourth and eighth week in rats that were fed standard chow, however, in rats that were fed low-salt chow, the increase in glomerular volume and development of further glomerular sclerosis was prevented whereas the protein excretion rate actually declined. Micropuncture studies performed 8 wk after ablation revealed that the glomerular hydraulic pressure was elevated in remnant kidneys and was not affected by salt restriction. This study demonstrates that dietary salt restriction can prevent further glomerular injury and reduce proteinuria even when instituted in rats with established renal disease. These findings are also consistent with the hypothesis that glomerular hypertrophy promotes injury in this model of hypertension and progressive renal disease.
PMID: 8704110
ISSN: 1046-6673
CID: 862252

Role of indirect allorecognition in chronic rejection of human allografts

Suciu-Foca, N; Liu, Z; Colovai, A I; Tugulea, S; Reed, E F; Mancini, D; Cohen, D J; Benvenisty, A I; Benstein, J A; Hardy, M A; Schulman, L L; Rose, E A
PMID: 8644291
ISSN: 0041-1345
CID: 862262

Influence of HLA matching on kidney allograft survival

Suciu-Foca, N; Cohen, D J; Benvenisty, A I; Benstein, J A; Reed, E F; Ho, E; Hardy, M A
PMID: 8644140
ISSN: 0041-1345
CID: 862272

Indirect recognition of native HLA alloantigens and B-cell help

Suciu-Foca, N; Liu, Z; Harris, P E; Reed, E F; Cohen, D J; Benstein, J A; Benvenisty, A I; Mancini, D; Michler, R E; Rose, E A
PMID: 7533416
ISSN: 0041-1345
CID: 862292

Influence of HLA matching on kidney allograft survival: UNOS allocation system greatly improves the outcome

Cohen, D J; Benvenisty, A I; Benstein, J A; Reed, E F; Ho, E; Suciu-Foca, N; Hardy, M A
PMID: 7879194
ISSN: 0041-1345
CID: 862282