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<ArticleSet>
	<Article>
		<Journal>
			<PublisherName/>
			<JournalTitle>IJOTM</JournalTitle>
			<Issn>2008-6490</Issn>
			<Volume>8</Volume>
			<Issue>2</Issue>
			<PubDate PubStatus="epublish">
				<Year>2017</Year>
				<Month>04</Month>
				<Day>29</Day>
			</PubDate>
		</Journal>
		<ArticleTitle>HCV-infected Renal Transplant Recipients: Our Experience before the Availability of New Antiviral Drugs</ArticleTitle>
		<FirstPage>104</FirstPage>
		<LastPage>109</LastPage>
		<Language>EN</Language>
		<AuthorList>
			<Author>
				<FirstName>AR</FirstName>
				<LastName>Fernandes</LastName>
				<Affiliation>Department of Nephrology, Hospital São Bernardo, Setúbal, Portugal. anar.fernandes@sapo.pt</Affiliation>
			</Author>
			<Author>
				<FirstName>IJ</FirstName>
				<LastName>Laranjinha</LastName>
			</Author>
			<Author>
				<FirstName>R</FirstName>
				<LastName>Birne</LastName>
			</Author>
			<Author>
				<FirstName>P</FirstName>
				<LastName>Matias</LastName>
			</Author>
			<Author>
				<FirstName>C</FirstName>
				<LastName>Jorge</LastName>
			</Author>
			<Author>
				<FirstName>T</FirstName>
				<LastName>Adragão</LastName>
			</Author>
			<Author>
				<FirstName>M</FirstName>
				<LastName>Bruges</LastName>
			</Author>
			<Author>
				<FirstName>A</FirstName>
				<LastName>Weigert</LastName>
			</Author>
			<Author>
				<FirstName>D</FirstName>
				<LastName>Machado</LastName>
			</Author>
		</AuthorList>
		<History>
			<PubDate PubStatus="received">
				<Year>2016</Year>
				<Month>10</Month>
				<Day>30</Day>
			</PubDate>
		</History>
		<Abstract>Background: Natural history of HCV-infected renal transplant recipients is about to change with the invention of new drugs available for the treatment of HCV.Objective: To analyze the evolution of renal transplant recipients infected with HCV in 30 years of activity of a Renal Transplantation Unit.Methods: We studied 1334 patients who underwent renal transplantation between 1985 and 2015.Results: 189 (14.2%) of these 1334 were found HCV seropositive. 60 were HCV RNA-positive for &amp;gt;6 months. 5 died with a functioning graft; 19 lost their graft and resumed dialysis. Most of the rejections occurred within the first year of the transplantation and none resulted in immediate loss of the graft. In post-transplantation period, 14 patients developed clinical hepatic disease, 10 manifested new-onset diabetes after transplantation, and 4 had de novo neoplasia, none of them had hepatocellular carcinoma. The outcomes of the different variables analyzed were similar between patients with HCV-infection and those with HCV and HBV co-infection. The median survival time was 13.4 (95% CI: 10.7&amp;ndash;16.1) years; the median survival time of patients without HCV infection was 14.6 (95% CI: 13.8&amp;ndash;15.4) years (p=0.23).Conclusion: In the era before the availability of new anti-HCV drugs, our experience with HCV-infected renal transplant recipients revealed similar post-transplantation complications, graft and patient survival as those not infected with HCV.</Abstract>
	</Article>
</ArticleSet>
