Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases in Renal Transplantat Recipients: A Case Series and Review of the Literature Cover

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases in Renal Transplantat Recipients: A Case Series and Review of the Literature

Open Access
|Apr 2022

Abstract

Inflammatory bowel diseases are autoimmune disorders affecting the gastrointestinal tract and producing a wide variety of extraintestinal manifestations. Kidneys are a rare target organ of their extraintestinal activity, but if affected, renal function could deteriorate to end-stage kidney disease, which is curable only by organ transplantation. Renal calculi are the most common pathological kidney manifestation in IBD patients, followed by tubulointerstitial nephritis, glomerulonephritis, and other kidney pathologies.

The liver is the most commonly transplanted organ in IBD patients (primary sclerosing cholangitis and autoimmune hepatitis), and a scarcity of literature on kidney recipients is present to date regarding the incidence of renal insufficiency, kidney transplantations, post-transplant IBD course and further complications such as graft rejection or infections in this specific group of patients. De novo IBD is a paradoxical entity in the setting of rigorous post-transplant immunosuppression.

In this case series, we present three patients who underwent kidney transplantation with a history of an IBD and one patient who developed de novo Crohn’s disease after the deceased donor organ transplant was performed.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/prilozi-2022-0006 | Journal eISSN: 1857-8985 | Journal ISSN: 1857-9345
Language: English
Page range: 57 - 63
Published on: Apr 22, 2022
Published by: Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2022 Jakob Vrus, Nikolina Bašić Jukić, published by Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.