EPIDEMIOLOGY
Incidence and Prevalence Estimates
- Solid organ transplants:
- End of 2007: 183,222 living transplant patients
- 27,281 organs transplanted in 2008
- Most transplanted organs: Kidney (59%), liver (21%), heart (8%), lung (5%), pancreas (4%)
- Most common diagnosis from visit to ED: Infection (36%), GI/GU pathology (20%), dehydration (15%), electrolyte (10%), CV and pulmonary pathology (10%), injury (8%), rejection (6%). 60% required hospitalization
- Hematopoietic stem cell transplants:
- 4,300 transplants in 2008
- Acute graft-versus-host disease incidence: 20–80%.
ETIOLOGY
- Reduction or noncompliance with medication:
- Medication interactions with cyclosporine, tacrolimus, or sirolimus:
- Phenobarbital, phenytoin, carbamazepine, rifampin, isoniazid
- Kidney transplant rejection:
- Early rejection caused by T and B lymphocytes, which attack microvasculature and impair graft perfusion; volume depletion, hypotension, infection
- Chronic rejection caused by progressive nephrosclerosis of renal vessels, infection
- Liver transplant rejection:
- Acute: 48% by 6 wk, 65% by 1 yr
- Commonly follows reduction in the IS regimen
- Chronic: <5%
- 1 wk to 6 mo MC range to experience
- Cardiac transplant rejection:
- Acute rejection:
- 75–85% of patients within the 1st 3–6 mo due to T-cell–mediated response
- Chronic rejection:
- Accelerated atherosclerosis is the hallmark
- Associated with change in IS therapy
- Lung transplant rejection:
- Acute rejection develops early:
- Can occur up to 6 times in the 1st year
- Chronic rejection:
- 25–40% of patients postop
- MCC of death in 2nd postop year
- Rejection caused by endothelial, vascular, and lymphocyte inflammation, recurrent acute rejection
- Bone marrow transplant rejection:
- Acute graft-versus-host disease:
- Immune attack of donor marrow on lung tissue
- Chronic graft-versus-host disease:
- Marrow rejection:
- MC in patients with plastic anemia who do not receive total body radiotherapy or in patients receiving mismatched or unrelated transplants
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Renal transplant rejection:
- Progressive systemic HTN
- Decreased urine output
- Swelling, fever, and tenderness:
- Uncommon with IS therapy
- Liver transplant rejection:
- Fever, RUQ pain, jaundice
- Heart transplant rejection:
- Fever, dyspnea, chest pain, hypo- or hypertension, palpitations, nausea, vomiting, syncope, sudden death
- Can be asymptomatic
- Lung transplant rejection:
- Cough, dyspnea, fever, rales, and rhonchi
- Bone marrow transplant rejection:
- Fever, wasting, mucositis, keratoconjunctivitis, dysphagia, cough, dyspnea, hypoxia, chest pain, abdominal pain, diarrhea, jaundice, rash, encephalopathy, seizures
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- CBC
- IS medication levels:
- Levels may not represent through if patient took medication prior to ED visit.
- Blood cultures
- Renal transplant rejection:
- Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, CRP
- Urinalysis with micro:
- Proteinuria may signal early rejection. Presence of leukocytes may be seen during rejection as well as with infection.
- FENa helps differentiate rejection from iatrogenic causes
- Liver transplant rejection:
- Coagulation panel, lipase, cultures (blood, urine, ascites), liver function tests
- Late acute rejection presents with elevated bilirubin and transaminases.
- Heart transplant rejection:
- Lung transplant rejection:
- ABG, electrolytes, kidney function, CRP, liver function, bilirubin, LDH, CPK, EBV, CMV, cyclosporine levels
- Bone marrow transplant rejection:
- ABG, liver function tests
Imaging
- CXR:
- Acute lung rejection:
- Diffuse infiltrates are seen early
- Normal or unchanged >1 mo after transplantation
- Bone marrow transplant rejection:
- Interstitial infiltrates, pleural effusion, pulmonary edema
- Renal US:
- Indicated for suspicion of renal transplant rejection:
- Hydronephrosis implies obstructive uropathy and may need urgent percutaneous nephrostomy.
- Liver transplant:
- Echocardiography:
- Heart transplant
- Assess for changes in cardiac output.
- MRI:
- Renal transplant:
- May be done with or without contrast
- Consult transplant team before giving contrast
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- Liver transplant rejection:
- Heart transplant rejection:
- EKG:
- Commonly demonstrates 2 P waves because the native sinus node is spared
- Lung transplant rejection:
- Peak flow reduced FEV1
- Early bronchoscopy and biopsy to differentiate infection from rejection
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Consider drug toxicity and infection as well as rejection.
- Ask about medication dose or compliance changes
- Low threshold for screening labs and imaging even with minimal signs and symptoms
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Infections:
- Wide variety of bacterial, mycobacterial, fungal, viral, and parasitic pathogens can cause opportunistic infections in transplant patients.
- IS toxicity
- Drug interactions with IS medication
- Renal transplant rejection:
- Any disorder that can affect the native kidneys can also occur in the transplant
- Iatrogenic nephrotoxicity: Cyclosporine, tacrolimus, other medications
- UTI/pyelonephritis:
- Classic organisms as with native kidney infections
- Tubulointerstitial nephritis caused by the BK-polyomavirus (incidence 3–5%)
- Acute occlusion of the transplant renal artery or vein:
- Acute occlusion usually occurs within the 1st post-transplant week (incidence 0.5–8%) and causes oliguria and acute renal failure.
- Peritransplant hematoma
- Urinary leak
- Obstructive uropathy
- Bleeding after renal graft biopsy
- Liver transplant rejection
- Ascending cholangitis:
- Possible from colonized postop biliary stent.
- Cholestatic hepatitis from azathioprine
- Methotrexate-induced hepatotoxicity
- Lung transplant rejection
- MC bacterial infection in lung transplant is cytomegalovirus pneumonia.
- MC fungal infection is Aspergillus.
- Upper respiratory infection or bronchitis:
- Mimic chronic lung rejection
- Medication-induced pneumonitis
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
Avoid aggressive fluid resuscitation.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- ABCs
- Shock state treated with IV fluids, and pressor agents.
- Treat hypertensive crisis like other hypertensive emergencies.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
ALERT
Always discuss with transplant service early unless unstable, especially when adding or changing medications.
ALERT
Caution with use of NSAIDs; there are many associated complications in these patients.
- Kidney, heart, lung, and liver rejection:
- Administer high-dose steroids
- Stress-dose corticosteroid coverage is also indicated in any ill-appearing transplant patient. Consult with transplant service early
- Avoid blood transfusions because these need special screening to prevent transmission of disease.
- Heart transplant rejection:
- Pressors and inotropics work as usual in the transplanted heart.
- Atropine will have no effect on bradycardia because there is no vagal innervation.
- Use dopamine, epinephrine drips, or external pacing to increase heart rate if bradycardia is symptomatic.
- IV methylprednisolone: 1 gm/d for 3 days
- Lung transplant:
- Treat for infection and rejection
- IV methylprednisolone: 15 mg/kg daily × 3 days
- Graft-versus-host disease:
- 1–2 mg/kg daily PO or IV steroids
- For chronic, may need adjustments of IS therapy.
- Common IS regimens are cyclosporine, prednisone, and azathioprine or tacrolimus and prednisone.
MEDICATION
As directed by transplant team
FOLLOW-UP