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Second and Third Kidney Transplants.

Renal transplant is the best procedure for patients with end-stage renal disease. Although an ideal kidney transplant should survive for the lifetime of each recipient, there may be a need for a second, third, or even a fourth retransplant. The outcomes of these kidney allografts, surgical approaches, immunology issues, and drug therapies warrant greater focus. Pediatric kidney retransplant is even more important because these patients are more immunologically responsive to donor antigens and because they need longer allograft survival. Although kidney retransplant provides a survival advantage for patients who would otherwise remain on the wait list and/or hemodialysis, careful patient selection is crucial for second, third, and fourth renal transplants. Despite the shortage of donor organs, outcomes, manageable complications, and economic considerations support earlier kidney retransplants rather than delayed retransplants. Preoperative vascular imaging, appropriate induction therapy, regular monitoring of renal function, and regular surveillance for malignancy and infection are more important in the retransplanted kidneys than in cases of first kidney transplants. The lack of robust data on optimal clinical management of these retransplant recipients has contributed to substantial variations in clinical practice among different centers. In this review, we discuss medical and surgical approaches in the cases of second and third kidney transplants.

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