Impact of Blood Pressure on Allograft Function and Survival in Kidney Transplant Recipients

The KOTRY Study Group

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

The optimal target blood pressure for kidney transplant (KT) patients remains unclear. We included 808 KT patients from the KNOW-KT as a discovery set, and 1,294 KT patients from the KOTRY as a validation set. The main exposures were baseline systolic blood pressure (SBP) at 1 year after KT and time-varying SBP. Patients were classified into five groups: SBP <110; 110–119; 120–129; 130–139; and ≥140 mmHg. SBP trajectories were classified into decreasing, stable, and increasing groups. Primary outcome was composite kidney outcome of ≥50% decrease in eGFR or death-censored graft loss. Compared with the 110–119 mmHg group, both the lowest (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 2.43) and the highest SBP (aHR, 2.25) were associated with a higher risk of composite kidney outcome. In time-varying model, also the lowest (aHR, 3.02) and the highest SBP (aHR, 3.60) were associated with a higher risk. In the trajectory model, an increasing SBP trajectory was associated with a higher risk than a stable SBP trajectory (aHR, 2.26). This associations were consistent in the validation set. In conclusion, SBP ≥140 mmHg and an increasing SBP trajectory were associated with a higher risk of allograft dysfunction and failure in KT patients.

Original languageEnglish
Article number12574
JournalTransplant International
Volume37
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 Kim, Kim, Joo, Ryu, Jung, Jeong, Kim, Ju, Han, Lee, Kang, Ro, Lee, Huh, Kim, Kim and Yang.

Keywords

  • blood pressure
  • graft outcome
  • kidney transplantation
  • time-varying
  • trajectory

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