Publication:
Factors influencing lymphocele development after kidney transplant: Single center experience

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Date

2023-03-01

Authors

Sayılar, Emel Işıktaş
Ayar, Yavuz
Aydın, Mehmet Fethullah
Kordan, Yakup

Authors

Sayılar, Emel Işıktaş
Ersoy, Alparslan
Ayar, Yavuz
Aydın, Mehmet Fethullah
Şahin, Ahmet Bilgehan
Coşkun, Burhan
Kaygısız, Onur
Yıldız, Abdülmecit
Kordan, Yakup
Vuruşkan, Hakan

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Başkent Üniversitesi

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Abstract

Objectives: Lymphocele is a well-known postoperative surgical complication after kidney transplant. In this study, our aim was to analyze incidence, risk factors, and outcomes of posttransplant lymphocele in a large cohort.Materials and Methods: This observational study included 395 consecutive patients (219 males and 176 females) who underwent kidney transplant procedures from 183 living and 212 deceased donors in our center between January 2007 and 2014. A lymphocele was diagnosed with ultrasonography.Results: The incidence of lymphoceles in our cohort was 31.9% (n = 126). There were no significant differences with regard to body mass indexes, age of donors, deceased donor ratios, acute rejection episodes, and history of abdominal surgery between those with and without lymphoceles. The pretransplant serum albumin levels (3.29 +/- 0.67 vs 3.48 +/- 0.69 g/dL; P = .009) in the lymphocele group and diabetes mellitus ratios (15.9% vs 4.5%; P < .001) in the nonlymphocele group were lower than levels shown in the other group. The lymphocele ratio in patients who received cyclosporine was higher than that shown in patients who did not received it (37.5% vs. 27.4%; P = .032). There was no difference in lymphocele incidence between patients who were taking and those who were not taking mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors, mycophenolate mofetil, or mycophenolate sodium. In regression analysis, presence of diabetes mellitus, transplant from deceased donors, older age of donors, and lower albumin levels were independent risk factors for posttransplant lymphocele occurrence.Conclusions: Posttransplant lymphocele was a relatively common surgical complication in our cohort. We concluded that diabetes mellitus, use of kidneys from deceased donors, older donor age, and hypoalbuminemia were independent risk factors for lymphocele development.

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Keywords

Wound-healing complications, Renal-transplantation, Surgical complications, Symptomatic lymphocele, Mycophenolate-mofetil, Donor nephrectomy, Risk-factors, Cyclosporine, Tacrolimus, Prevention, Renal transplantation, Risk factors, Surgical complication, Transplantation

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