a bacterium commonly found in soil and water presents a profound risk to the compromised immune systems of kidney transplant patients, causing pneumonia, brain abscess and even death, according to a new analysis.
the research,
published in the journal of investigative medicine, revealed that nocardia infections, which thrive in patients whose immune systems have been diminished by cancer treatment or organ transplants, represent a serious threat requiring the vigilance of healthcare professionals. kidney transplant patients are at particular risk because the drugs required to stop an immune system from rejecting an organ also increase the risk of infection the longer they are taken.
while the dose and specific drug can be adjusted, this medicine is required as long as the transplanted organ remains in a new patient,
according to sandeep padala, a nephrologist at the medical college of georgia and the augusta university health system. “kidney transplant patients are at risk for all kinds of infections,” he said.
to determine the extent of the risk, researchers examined 203,233 kidney transplant recipients from the u.s. renal data system between 2001 and 2011, searching for patients who suffered from nocardiosis and failure of the kidney after infection, among other demographic factors. they found 657 patients, a lower percentage than previous studies, had experienced this infection; most patients were above the age of 65 and had received their kidneys from deceased donors, the most common source for transplants.