Survival and outcome analysis shows that selected HIV-positive patients are good candidates for liver and kidney transplant

This article is more than 8 years old. Click here for more recent articles on this topic

Liver and kidney transplant can be justified for carefully selected HIV-positive patients, researchers from the United States show in AIDS. Transplant improved the chances of survival for HIV-positive patients with severe liver disease. Comparison with HIV-negative transplant patients showed that HIV-positive liver patients were more likely to experience organ rejection or die, but the difference in risk for both these outcomes was small.

“The modest increase in risk compared with HIV-negative recipients, as well as the absolute proportion of those who died, and comparability with other transplant populations, support liver transplant as a viable option in carefully selected and managed recipients,” comment the authors. “HIV-positive kidney recipients experienced similar outcomes as their HIV-negative counterparts approximately 5 years post-transplant in all control analyses.”

Approximately 2% of patients with HIV develop kidney failure and end-stage liver disease is an increasingly important cause of death in the HIV-infected population. This means that a growing proportion of HIV-positive patients require kidney or liver transplants. However, it has been questioned if patients with HIV are good transplant candidates.

Glossary

matched

In a case-control study, a process to make the cases and the controls comparable with respect to extraneous factors. For example, each case is matched individually with a control subject on variables such as age, sex and HIV status. 

body mass index (BMI)

Body mass index, or BMI, is a measure of body size. It combines a person's weight with their height. The BMI gives an idea of whether a person has the correct weight for their height. Below 18.5 is considered underweight; between 18.5 and 25 is normal; between 25 and 30 is overweight; and over 30 is obese. Many BMI calculators can be found on the internet.

Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP)

Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia is a form of pneumonia that is an AIDS defining illness.

Kaposi's sarcoma (KS)

Lesions on the skin and/or internal organs caused by abnormal growth of blood vessels.  In people living with HIV, Kaposi’s sarcoma is an AIDS-defining cancer.

prognosis

The prospect of survival and/or recovery from a disease as anticipated from the usual course of that disease or indicated by the characteristics of the patient.

Investigators from San Francisco therefore designed a study to determine if the prognosis of patients was improved by transplantation and to compare outcomes between HIV-positive and HIV-negative transplant recipients in terms of graft loss and death. The study also examined if any factors were associated with organ rejection of death in patients with HIV, rates of infections and hospitalisation, and the impact of transplant on key HIV markers, including CD4 count and viral load.

The HIV-positive study population consisted of 125 liver and 150 kidney transplant patients who underwent transplantation between 2003 and 2010. Their outcomes were compared with HIV-positive patients who were candidates for liver (n = 148) or kidney (n = 167) transplant who received care in the same period but who did not receive a new organ. The kidney patients had a CD4 cell count above 100 cells/mm3 and an undetectable HIV viral load; liver patients had CD4 counts above 200 cells/mm3 and either an undetectable viral load or the possibility of establishing viral control after transplant.

Liver and kidney recipients were followed for a median of 3.5 and 4.0 years, respectively. Candidates were monitored for approximately a year.

Transplant was associated with a significant survival benefit (p < 0.0001) for patients with more severe liver disease (MELD score of at least 15), but not for patients with less severe liver disease or for kidney recipients.

Factors associated with increased mortality risk for liver transplant patients included dual transplant (hazard ratio 3.8, 95% confidence interval 1.6-8.8,p = 0.002), low pre-transplant body mass index, or BMI (HR 2.2, 95% CI 1.1-4.4, p = 0.03), older donor age (HR 1.3 per decade, 95% CI 1.1-1.6, p = 0.01) and co-infection with hepatitis C virus, (HR 2.1, 95% CI 1.0-4.6, p = 0.06). The same factors were associated with graft loss.

Risk factors for increased mortality risk among kidney recipients included older age at the time of transplant (HR 1.07 per decade, 95% CI 1.1-1.26, p = 0.01) and therapy with thymoglobulin in in the first week after transplant (HR 3.5, 95% CI 1.3-9.1, p = 0.01). Treatment with this drug was also associated with organ rejection (p = 0.048).

Twelve AIDS-defining opportunistic infection (cutaneous Kaposi’s sarcoma, esophageal or bronchial candidiasis, PCP pneumonia) were observed in liver transplant patients and four of these individuals died, the causes of death being multi-system organ failure, cerebrovascular accident and recurrent HCV infection.

Three kidney recipients experienced a recurrence of HIV-associated kidney disease. Their CD4 count at the time of recurrence ranged between 0 and 770 cells/mm3.

Serious non-HIV-related infections were observed in 55% of liver and 50% of kidney recipients. Half occurred in the first six months post transplant. For both liver and kidney recipients, most of these infections were bacterial (80% and 71%, respectively). HCV co-infection was associated with an increased risk of infections for both groups of transplant patients.

For liver patients, there was some evidence of post-transplant recovery in CD4 cell count.

Over three years of follow-up, 20% of liver patients and 16% of kidney patients experienced an increase in their HIV viral load to detectable levels. Most, however, subsequently re-established viral control.

The risk of graft-loss and death was compared between the patients with HIV and HIV-negative patients. The investigators conducted four sets of comparison: unmatched, demographically-matched, demographically-matched adjusted for risk score and risk-matched. HIV-negative patients were identified in national databases. Median follow-up was approximately four years.

For kidney recipients, unmatched and risk-matched analysis showed that HIV-positive patients had marginally significant increases in the risk of organ rejection (p = 0.07 and p = 0.52, respectively). All models showed that HIV-positive liver recipients had an increase in the risk of graft loss compared to the controls.

HIV was not associated with an increased risk of death after kidney transplant. HIV-positive liver recipients had an increased risk of death in the unmatched (p = 0.01), demographically-matched (p = 0.01) and demographically-matched risk-score adjusted (p = 0.01) models, but not the risk-matched model. “The absolute difference in the proportion of deaths was 6.7% in the risk-matched control analysis,” note the investigators.

“These analyses support kidney and liver transplantation as an option for carefully selected people with HIV infection,” conclude the authors.

References

Roland ME et al. Survival in HIV-positive transplant recipients compared with transplant candidates and with HIV-negative controls. AIDS 30: 435-44, 2016.