Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo (Aug 2000)

The use of cyclosporine modifies the clinical and histopathological presentation of tuberculosis after renal transplantation

  • Eloir BIZ,
  • Carlos Alberto Pires PEREIRA,
  • Luis Antonio Ribeiro de MOURA,
  • Ricardo SESSO,
  • Maria Lucia dos Santos VAZ,
  • Alvaro Pacheco SILVA FILHO,
  • José Osmar Medina PESTANA

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 4
pp. 225 – 230

Abstract

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Tuberculosis is one of the most frequent opportunistic infections after renal transplantation and occurred in 30 of 1264 patients transplanted between 1976 and 1996 at Hospital São Paulo - UNIFESP and Hospital Dom Silvério, Brazil. The incidence of 2.4% is five times higher than the Brazilian general population. The disease occurred between 50 days to 18 years after the transplant, and had an earlier and worse development in patients receiving azathioprine, prednisone and cyclosporine, with 35% presenting as a disseminated disease, while all patients receiving azathioprine and prednisone had exclusively pulmonary disease. Ninety percent of those patients had fever as the major initial clinical manifestation. Diagnosis was made by biopsy of the lesion (50%), positivity to M. tuberculosis in the sputum (30%) and spinal cerebral fluid analysis (7%). Duration of treatment ranged from 6 to 13 months and hepatotoxicity occurred in 3 patients. The patients who died had a significant greater number of rejection episodes and received higher doses of corticosteroid. In conclusion, the administration of cyclosporine changed the clinical and histopathological pattern of tuberculosis occurring after renal transplantation.

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