Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jul 2022)

Assessment of Renal Transplant Perfusion by Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound after Switch from Calcineurin Inhibitor to Belatacept: A Pilot Study

  • Bilgin Osmanodja,
  • Frédéric Muench,
  • Alexander Holderied,
  • Klemens Budde,
  • Thomas Fischer,
  • Markus Herbert Lerchbaumer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11154354
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 15
p. 4354

Abstract

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Calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs) have improved short-term kidney allograft survival but are nephrotoxic and vasoconstrictive. Vasoconstriction is potentially reversible after switching from CNIs to belatacept. The kidney allograft shows optimal requirements for dynamic perfusion imaging using contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS). We performed standardized CEUS in patients after switching from CNIs to belatacept for clinical indication to study the suitability of CEUS, in order to assess the effects of CNI cessation on kidney allograft perfusion. Eleven kidney transplant patients were enrolled from February 2020 until November 2020. Demographic, clinical, and laboratory parameters, as well as perfusion imaging, were assessed at baseline and 6 months after switching immunosuppression. Quantification of perfusion imaging on CEUS was performed using a post-processing software tool on uncompressed DICOM cine loops. After CNI cessation, estimated glomerular filtration rate increased by 4.8 mL/min/1.73 m2 (16%). Despite good quality of fit and comparable regions of interest in baseline and follow-up CEUS examinations, quantification of perfusion imaging showed a slightly improved cortical perfusion without reaching statistical significance after CNI cessation. This is the first study that systematically investigates the suitability of CEUS to detect changes of microvascular perfusion in kidney transplant recipients in vivo. No significant differences could be detected in perfusion measurements before and after CNI cessation.

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