Browsing by Author "Caeiro, Fernando"
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- Abdominal Hypoperfusion and Acute Kidney Injury in the Critically Ill Patient with Liver Cirrhosis: A Prospective Cohort Study.Publication . Pereira, Rui; Lopes, Diogo; Brandão Machado, Sara; Val-Flores, Luís; Caeiro, Fernando; Perdigoto, Rui; Marcelino, Paulo; Saliba, FaouziReduced abdominal perfusion pressure (APP) is an underdiagnosed potential pathophysiological mechanism for acute kidney injury (AKI) in the patient with liver cirrhosis and ascites. This study aimed to analyze the prevalence of abdominal hypoperfusion (AhP) (APP <60 mm Hg) and the impact of APP on AKI in critically ill patients with liver cirrhosis. This was a post hoc analysis from a prospective cohort study set in a general ICU at a tertiary university hospital. Patients were recruited between October 2016 and December 2021. Acute renal failure (ARF) was defined by stage 3 AKI according to the International Club of Ascites. Fifty-eight patients where included, with a mean age of 57 (±8.4) years, 79% were male, and 93% had acute-on-chronic liver failure at admission. The prevalence of AhP reached 75%, and 29% of cases had persisting AhP during the first week of ICU stay. Patients with baseline AhP had a higher 28-day mortality compared to those without AhP (respectively, 76% vs. 49%, = 0.03). Acute renal failure developed in 48% of patients. Higher serum urea (aOR: 1.01, 95% CI: 1.00-1.02, = 0.04) and white blood cell count (aOR: 1.1, 95% CI: 1.01-1.2, = 0.02) at ICU admission, as well as low persisting APP (aOR: 0.9, 95% CI: 0.86-0.98, = 0.02) were independent risk factors for ARF. Critically ill patients with liver cirrhosis presented a high prevalence of ARF, independently associated with higher baseline serum urea and WBC, and lower persisting APP. A structured clinical approach to optimize APP may reduce renal dysfunction in high-risk patients with cirrhosis.
- Biochemical Clusters as Substitutes of Bone Biopsies in Kidney Transplant Patients.Publication . Ferreira, Ana Carina; Mendes, Marco; Silva, Cecília; Cotovio, Patrícia; Aires, Inês; Navarro, David; Caeiro, Fernando; Salvador, Rute; Correia, Bruna; Cabral, Guadalupe; Nolasco, Fernando; Ferreira, AníbalBone and mineral metabolism abnormalities are frequent in kidney transplant recipients and have been associated with cardiovascular morbidity. The primary aim of this study was to analyse the association between routine clinically available biochemical evaluation, non-routine histomorphometric bone evaluation, and vascular disease in kidney transplanted patients. A cross-sectional analysis was performed on 69 patients, 1-year after kidney transplantation. Laboratory analysis, radiography of hands and pelvis, bone biopsy, bone densitometry, and coronary CT were performed. One-year post-transplantation, nearly one-third of the patients presented with hypercalcemia, 16% had hypophosphatemia, 39.3% had iPTH levels > 150 pg/mL, 20.3% had BALP levels > 40 U/L, and 26.1% had hypovitaminosis D. Evaluation of extraosseous calcifications revealed low Adragão and Agatston scores. We divided patients into three clusters, according to laboratory results routinely used in clinical practice: hypercalcemia and hyperparathyroidism (Cluster1); hypercalcemia and high BALP levels (Cluster2); hypophosphatemia and vitamin D deficiency (Cluster 3). Patients in clusters 1 and 2 had higher cortical porosity (p = 0.001) and osteoid measurements, although there was no difference in the presence of abnormal mineralization, or low volume. Patients in cluster 2 had a higher BFR/BS (half of the patients in cluster 2 had high bone turnover), and most patients in cluster 1 had low or normal bone turnover. Cluster 3 has no differences in volume, or turnover, but 60% of the patients presented with pre-osteomalacia. All three clusters were associated with high vascular calcifications scores. Vascular calcifications scores were not related to higher bone mineral density. Instead, an association was found between a higher Adragão score and the presence of osteoporosis at the femoral neck (p = 0.008). In conclusion, inferring bone TMV by daily clinical biochemical analysis can be misleading, and bone biopsy is important for assessing both bone turnover and mineralization after kidney transplantation, although hypophosphatemia combined with vitamin D deficiency is associated with abnormal mineralization. The presence of hypercalcemia with high levels of PTH or high levels of BALP, or hypophosphatemia and vitamin D deficiency should remind us to screen vascular calcification status of patients.Clinical Research: ClinicalTrials.gov ID NCT02751099.
- Individualizing Treatment for CMV with UL97 del597-599 Mutation: Beyond Unusual Response to a Lower Ganciclovir Dose IncreasePublication . Piedade, Ana; Vidal, Helena; Simões, Pilar; Bigotte Vieira, Miguel; Chasqueira, Maria Jesus; Caeiro, Fernando; Aires, Inês; Paixão, Paulo; Jorge, CristinaHuman cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is the most prevalent infection affecting organ transplant recipients, and it is a cause of morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing kidney transplantation. The introduction of ganciclovir (GCV) for both prophylaxis and treatment has vastly improved patient outcomes. GCV resistance can be caused by mutations in the UL97 phosphotransferase gene or the UL54 polymerase gene. It occurs in 1 to 2% of kidney transplant recipients with CMV infection or disease. Antiviral resistance should be considered when increased viral loads and disease progression are observed despite the administration of adequate antiviral therapy. The degree of resistance varies depending on the type of mutation present. We report a patient with resistance to GCV due to a UL97 del597-599 mutation who, despite typically requiring an 8-fold increase in GCV dose, showed a significant decrease in viral load with just a double dose increase. However, the patient’s overall clinical course remained complicated. Due to severe leukopenia, maribavir had to be started, with a good response. Nevertheless, he ultimately died due to indirect CMV-related complications. This case also highlights the complexity of transplant patients, who present multiple challenges ranging from infections to therapy management.