loader image
Monday, December 8, 2025
57.5 F
McAllen
- Advertisement -

Lifestyle changes can be critical

Translate to Spanish or other 102 languages!

Only 1 in 4 transplanted kidney losses were caused by organ rejection. Courtesy Image
Only 1 in 4 transplanted kidney losses were caused by organ rejection. Courtesy Image

Mega Doctor News

- Advertisement -

MAYO CLINIC – ROCHESTER, Minnesota — Cancer, infections and heart disease pose the greatest risk to kidney transplant recipients ― not organ rejection ― according to a recently published Mayo Clinic study. Researchers discovered that recipient death due to factors other than organ rejection is the leading cause for transplanted kidney loss. Only 1 in 4 transplanted kidney losses were caused by organ rejection.

“Immunosuppression medication to prevent rejection is often the focus when caring for patients posttransplant. But this study highlights the increased risk of death from cancer and infection for transplant patients, especially those who are older and have diabetes,” says Andrew Bentall, M.B., Ch.B., M.D., a Mayo Clinic nephrologist and the study’s co-first author. The study was recently published in Transplantation Direct.

The study, the largest to examine reasons for transplanted kidney loss, involved 5,752 patients who underwent a kidney transplant at Mayo Clinic kidney transplant programs in Arizona, Florida or Minnesota between 2006 and 2018. Of those patients, 691 patients died with a functioning kidney. Researchers found that 20% of these patients died from cancer; 19.7%, infection; and 12.6%, cardiac disease.

- Advertisement -

Another 553 patients lost their transplant due to the failure of a transplanted kidney. Of these patients, 38.7% of the patients’ kidneys failed due to rejection; 18.6%, glomerular diseases; and 13.9%, tubular injury.

Researchers uncovered two types of kidney transplant recipients who are at high risk after transplant. The first are younger, nondiabetic patients who develop kidney failure due to organ rejection. The second group includes older, often diabetic patients who are at risk of death due to causes not associated with organ rejection, including cancer, infections and heart disease.

Dr. Bentall says this study makes clear that care providers need to treat these two populations differently to minimize risks. For younger patients, that includes focusing on immunosuppression medication to prevent rejection. For older, often diabetic patients, it is critical to address chronic health issues, such as obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes. Focusing on these lifestyle changes is critical for improving long-term outcomes for kidney transplant recipients.

“It is important for these older patients that care providers emphasize the need for ongoing lifestyle changes that address obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes. Those include losing weight, exercising and new strategies for managing diabetes,” he says. “Making those changes could potentially impact the patient’s life and kidney outcomes more than immunosuppression therapies.”

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -

More Articles

STHS McAllen Hosting 40th Anniversary Community Celebration, Dec. 11th

For the last 40 years, South Texas Health System (STHS) McAllen has stood tall in the South Texas skyline, serving as a beacon of healing and hope for the residents of McAllen and the greater Rio Grande Valley.

DHR Health Awarded Large Employer of the Year by Texas Workforce Commission

Workforce Solutions Lower Rio Grande Valley (WFS) proudly announced that its nominee, DHR Health, has been awarded the Large Employer of the Year Award at the 28th Annual Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) Conference.

ACIP: Parents to Decide on Hepatitis B Vaccine for Infants

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) today voted 8 to 3 to recommend individual-based decision-making for parents deciding whether to give the hepatitis B vaccine, including the birth dose, to infants born to women who test negative for the virus.

CDC Warns of Salmonella Outbreak Tied to Moringa Leaf in Supplements

11 people from 7 states have gotten sick from the same strain of Salmonella. Three people have been hospitalized, and no deaths have been reported.
- Advertisement -
×