Indian Journal of Transplantation (Jan 2021)

Live kidney donor with a history of COVID-19 infection: When to go for transplant? - A case report

  • Hari Shankar Meshram,
  • Vivek B Kute,
  • Himanshu Patel,
  • Rutul M Dave,
  • Vaibhav R Gupta,
  • Vijay V Navadiya,
  • Dev D Patel,
  • Sanshriti Chauhan,
  • Sudeep Desai,
  • Ruchir Dave

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/ijot.ijot_19_21
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4
pp. 364 – 367

Abstract

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Transplant in COVID era is a challenging task given a paucity of data and limited experience worldwide. A 35-year-old male patient with chronic kidney disease on dialysis for the past 9 months underwent successful living-related donor transplant with his father (aged 64 years) as donor at our center. In this case, donor was diagnosed with reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR)-confirmed COVID-19 during evaluation, and he was managed with supportive care and comprehensive social distancing at home. Donor was asymptomatic throughout this period. Interval from positive to negative RT-PCR for nasopharyngeal swab test was 37 days. Interval from negative RT-PCR to kidney transplant was 33 days. Later, recipient and donor were discharged with negative RT-PCR posttransplant. At 71 days of follow-up, both recipient and donor have stable kidney function with normal urinalysis. Hence, prospective donor with a history of COVID-19 infection can be taken for transplant after thorough pretransplant evaluation and having two negative RT-PCR reports after infection, normal imaging, and additional preprocedural negative RT-PCR testing.

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