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Adv Anat Pathol. 2007 May;14(3):202-16. doi: 10.1097/PAP.0b013e3180504927.

Renal pathology in the pediatric transplant patient.

Advances in anatomic pathology

Carole Vogler, Yihan Wang, David S Brink, Ellen Wood, Craig Belsha, Patrick D Walker

Affiliations

  1. Department of Pathology, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO 63104, USA. [email protected]

PMID: 17452817 DOI: 10.1097/PAP.0b013e3180504927

Abstract

Renal transplantation is a therapeutic goal for children with advanced chronic kidney disease. There are many causes of renal dysfunction in children with allografts--the transplanted kidney can develop a variety of morphologic alterations leading to dysfunction. Evaluation of the kidney biopsy is one of the best methods of determining the cause of graft dysfunction. Rejection is a major cause of renal allograft failure in children. The morphologic hallmarks of acute antibody-mediated and cell-mediated rejection and chronic allograft nephropathy have been codified in classification strategies that are useful in adults and children. Viral infection and Epstein-Barr virus-driven posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease also occur in the pediatric transplanted kidney. Drug toxicity from immunosuppressive agents also causes characteristic morphologic alterations in the renal allograft. As the survival of pediatric heart and liver transplant patients improves, the incidence of immunosuppression therapy-related disease in the native kidney in these patients will likely become more important clinically. In addition to renal lesions related to the allograft state, glomerular disease can recur or occur de novo in renal allografts. Here, we describe the pathology of the more common morphologic lesions in kidneys of children with a renal allograft.

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