Background: Aristolochic acids (AA) are nephrotoxic and carcinogenic. The aim of this study was to assess the long-term outcome of patients with AA nephropathy (AAN) after kidney transplantation.
Methods: Observational study. Patients' characteristics, long-term surveillance and follow-up data, patient and graft survival, as well as outcomes with respect to rejection, cardiovascular complications, infections, and cancers with a focus on urothelial carcinomas, are reported.
Results: Twenty patients transplanted for AAN were included. All were submitted to prophylactic bilateral ureteronephrectomy and annual surveillance of the bladder. Median duration of posttransplant follow-up was 12.5 (3-19) years. Time from diagnosis of AAN to renal replacement therapy was relatively short (1 [0-15] years). Immunosuppression consisted of a triple therapy in the majority of patients. Nineteen patients had upper urinary tract multifocal atypia. Eleven patients presented with urothelial carcinomas of the upper tract; 2 of them with additional bladder urothelial carcinomas. Of these 2 patients, one required radical cystectomy. One patient developed a hepatocarcinoma. Patient survival was 100% in AAN patients at 5, 10, and 15 years after transplantation. Graft survival at 5, 10, and 15 years was 95%, 83%, and 75%.
Conclusions: Despite a high prevalence of urothelial carcinoma and the risk of bladder carcinoma, the long-term patient and kidney graft survival is excellent in patients with AAN, provided that prophylactic bilateral ureteronephrectomy and lifelong surveillance of the bladder are performed.