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1 nt had been screened for latent TB infection pretransplant.
2 09) when such treatment was not administered pretransplant.
3 to both HLA and non-HLA antigens are present pretransplant.
4 09) when such treatment was not administered pretransplant.
5  SAB analysis revealed 35 DSA in 20 patients pretransplant.
6 for surgical correction of the urinary tract pretransplant.
7 ncy patients beginning XOR inhibitor therapy pretransplant.
8  Ten patients received XOR inhibitor therapy pretransplant (11 allografts), while 8 patients did not
9 Ten patients received XOR inhhibitor therapy pretransplant (11 allografts), while 8 patients did not
10 ssment of transplant program performance and pretransplant access.
11                                              Pretransplant admission strongly predicted more frequent
12 ry model for end-stage liver disease scores, pretransplant alpha fetoprotein, and cumulative tumor di
13      Fifty-eight recipients were studied: 23 pretransplant and 40 posttransplant (including 5 with pr
14 nts underwent HLA-antibody testing quarterly pretransplant and at regular intervals over the first 24
15 nt recipients (n = 50), levels were measured pretransplant and daily for 4 days posttransplant.
16                                              Pretransplant and intraoperative bariatric surgeries hav
17 nts in multivariate analysis controlling for pretransplant and pathologic factors (HR 1.32, P = 0.044
18 387 were transplanted, and 326 provided both pretransplant and post-transplant data.
19 galovirus (CMV) activity was assessed in 280 pretransplant and posttransplant blood samples from 33 d
20 to determine the type of organ transplanted, pretransplant and posttransplant cancer, and immunosuppr
21 allocation, adherence to prescribed therapy, pretransplant and posttransplant care, implementation of
22                            Associations with pretransplant and posttransplant delisting/mortality, ho
23 l practice are associated with reductions in pretransplant and posttransplant hyperparathyroidism, vi
24 al confounding variables identified separate pretransplant and posttransplant IR thresholds for predi
25 e studied more than 270 000 patients on whom pretransplant and posttransplant malignancy data were re
26 B) are used for monitoring HLA antibodies in pretransplant and posttransplant patients despite the di
27                                              Pretransplant and posttransplant sera from 162 lung reci
28 considered for LT need to be assessed in the pretransplant and posttransplant settings because these
29 ecific RNA-Seq transcriptomes are comparable pretransplant and posttransplant, suggesting that the ce
30  (PCR) and immunoglobulin G (IgG) testing on pretransplant and serially collected posttransplant samp
31                                              Pretransplant and technical variables were included in t
32 graphic progression of CAD between baseline (pretransplant) and follow-up at 7 years or older.
33 xyurea and azathioprine starting at -45 days pretransplant, and fludarabine from days -16 to -12.
34                              The presence of pretransplant anti-ARHGDIB antibodies has an additive ef
35                                              Pretransplant antibiotic allergy evaluation may optimize
36  rejection were observed for recipients with pretransplant antibodies to AT1R (P = 0.19) and ETAR (P
37                                     When the pretransplant antibody status of HLA-specific antibody (
38                           Median duration of pretransplant antifungal therapy and posttransplant ther
39                              The presence of pretransplant antiphospholipid antibodies increases risk
40           A careful oncological surveillance pretransplant as well as posttransplant is recommended.
41  point of care, making them suitable for the pretransplant assessment of bile duct viability.
42 g (IADL) and gait speed, may be an important pretransplant assessment.
43                                              Pretransplant basal cell carcinoma of the skin and male
44 ansplant (simultaneous), and recipients with pretransplant bilateral nephrectomies (pre).
45                                              Pretransplant biopsy was performed more frequently in hB
46  qualifying list or one diagnosis code and a pretransplant biopsy.
47            We retrospectively determined the pretransplant BKV neutralizing serostatus of 116 donors
48                                  We analyzed pretransplant blood and bone marrow samples by reverse-t
49 s a graded, detrimental impact of increasing pretransplant BMI on the risk of graft failure after kid
50                                The impact of pretransplant body mass index (BMI) on long-term allogra
51                    To evaluate the effect of pretransplant bridging locoregional therapy (LRT) on hep
52  Each patient had a separate donor; however, pretransplant bronchoalveolar lavage fluid was only avai
53                  The patient was JCPyV naive pretransplant, but showed high antibody titers during th
54  to assess whether modifying muscle function pretransplant can lead to improved clinical outcomes.
55 ll (n = 95) renal transplanted patients with pretransplant cancer diagnoses in the Uppsala-Orebro reg
56          Kidney transplant recipients with a pretransplant cancer had a similar overall patient and g
57                                Patients with pretransplant cancer showed higher incidence of posttran
58 atient and graft survival of recipients with pretransplant cancer to the outcomes of matched recipien
59 istry and included European patients without pretransplant cancer.
60 to 2010, 377 (6.4%) of 5867 recipients had a pretransplant cancer.
61  on coronary artery disease, a comprehensive pretransplant cardiac evaluation must consider other pro
62 n obese individuals and remain the basis for pretransplant cardiovascular evaluation and risk stratif
63 ct plan was estimated to reduce payments for pretransplant care ($1638 million to $1506 million, p <
64                                 Importantly, pretransplant CD antigen expression is most predictive o
65                                Patients with pretransplant CDOA were more likely to be 19 to 30 years
66 ncerning HSCT itself (including the need for pretransplant chemotherapy, the best conditioning regime
67                In a subset of 37 recipients, pretransplant circulating Treg cell-suppressive function
68 , screening instruments, clinical monitoring pretransplant, clinical monitoring posttransplant, patie
69       Patients at high risk for CMV based on pretransplant CMI developed significantly higher CMV inf
70 Procurement Organization (OPO) began a novel pretransplant CMV prevention strategy via matching decea
71 nical trial assessed the value of monitoring pretransplant CMV-specific cell-mediated immunity (CMI)
72                                              Pretransplant CMV-specific CMI identifies D+/R+ kidney r
73        Nineteen (28%) of 67 D+R- KTRs showed pretransplant CMV-specific T cells.
74 undred sixty-two (80%) of 203 R+ KTRs showed pretransplant CMV-specific T cells.
75                            After adjustment, pretransplant cognitive scores were significantly lower
76  has been reported in 13% to 50% of selected pretransplant cohorts, but use of more precise diagnosti
77                                         Nine pretransplant comorbidity covariates were defined: cardi
78 ith early hospital readmission often reflect pretransplant comorbidity, and many of these factors may
79 ls choline and myo-inositol that were higher pretransplant compared with controls (P=0.001 and P<0.00
80 ral blood flow, which was higher in patients pretransplant compared with controls (P=0.003), decrease
81                          Thus, myeloablative pretransplant conditioning can be safely combined with h
82                                              Pretransplant conditioning consisted of fludarabine and
83 ransplantation (ABOi) in children is rare as pretransplant conditioning remains challenging and conce
84 ng to receive a kidney transplant, including pretransplant considerations, posttransplant monitoring,
85                               In conclusion, pretransplant COPD, impaired graft function and the occu
86 enal transplant recipients and donors during pretransplant counselling.
87 no significant differences in transplant and pretransplant covariates between induction and no induct
88 April 1, all donors and recipients underwent pretransplant COVID-19 testing, all returning negative r
89                          At our institution, pretransplant COVID-19 testing, use of local donor lungs
90 iving late reallocation based on the type of pretransplant crossmatch used for the intended recipient
91 air the DNA damage response, and more severe pretransplant cytopenias, but not with bone marrow blast
92 ghly optimized for favorable outcomes in the pretransplant DAA treatment arm (low availability of HCV
93                                          The pretransplant DAA treatment strategy trended towards cos
94 lth outcomes at cost savings compared to the pretransplant DAA treatment strategy.
95                                  We compared pretransplant DAA treatment versus deferred DAA treatmen
96                                              Pretransplant, dCLKT had longer ICU stay, were more ofte
97                                              Pretransplant, dCLKT had longer intensive care unit stay
98 of living-donor kidney transplants requiring pretransplant desensitization (NCT01399593).
99                            Rather than using pretransplant desensitization therapies, we used a postt
100 dementia and AD were older recipient age and pretransplant diabetes.
101                                              Pretransplant diagnosis of chronic pulmonary obstructive
102 index, mean pulmonary arterial pressure, and pretransplant diagnosis, higher E/e and E/e greater than
103 (HCV)-negative recipient population included pretransplant dialysis (adjusted incident rate ratio [aI
104    In HCV-negative SLK recipients, recipient pretransplant dialysis and components of kidney graft qu
105      Multivariate predictors of RAF included pretransplant dialysis duration, kidney cold ischemia, k
106                              Adjustments for pretransplant dialysis duration, sex, country, and trans
107                                       Longer pretransplant dialysis exposure is associated with a hig
108 fic dialysis mortality on the association of pretransplant dialysis exposure with transplant survival
109  and graft survival were compared for preKT, pretransplant dialysis less than 1 year, and pretranspla
110 ic time, donor age, previous transplant, and pretransplant dialysis modality.
111 pretransplant dialysis less than 1 year, and pretransplant dialysis recipients of 1 year or longer.
112                        Patients who received pretransplant dialysis treatment in a state with a high
113 ared with patients with the same duration of pretransplant dialysis treatment in a state with a lower
114                                              Pretransplant dialysis vintage is associated with excess
115 ing variables: transplant age, gender, race, pretransplant dialysis, transplant center, and year).
116                                      Neither pretransplant disorder was related to risk for any outco
117                                              Pretransplant DNA samples from 696 CBUs with malignant d
118 gher in recipients who developed BK viremia, pretransplant donor, recipient, and combined donor/recip
119                   Sensitized recipients with pretransplant donor-specific Abs are at higher risk for
120 s (DSA-M) in renal allograft recipients with pretransplant donor-specific HLA antibodies (DSA) and it
121             Delayed graft function (DGF) and pretransplant donor-specific HLA-antibodies (DSA) are bo
122 gy (median time after transplant, 5.0 years; pretransplant DSA documented in 19 recipients), who were
123                          Next, we determined pretransplant DSA using various MFI cutoffs, signal-to-b
124                                              Pretransplant DSA was detected in 12 (11%) recipients wi
125 antibody-mediated rejection in patients with pretransplant DSA, neither the presence of HLA antibodie
126 vival longer than 1 year, and (3) absence of pretransplant DSA.
127                                     Overall, pretransplant DSA/DSA-Mpos allograft recipients showed a
128 P < .0001) but no difference in the need for pretransplant ECMO (incidence rate ratio = 1.16, P = .12
129 splant LOS but no significant differences in pretransplant ECMO or other posttransplant outcomes.
130 entially increase single lung transplants or pretransplant ECMO utilization.
131                 Seventy patients (15.4%) had pretransplant eGFR < 60 mL/min, which was associated wit
132 n NASH candidates and strategies to optimize pretransplant evaluation and waitlist survival.
133 f PET/CT imaging for response assessment and pretransplant evaluation in lymphoma.
134 r events constitute an important part of the pretransplant evaluation.
135 han their native lungs, and with significant pretransplant exposure to steroids, factors that when co
136 nge on recipient characteristics, the use of pretransplant extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO)
137  center from April 2008 to July 2018 and had pretransplant FDG PET (n=18) or cardiac MRI (n=31).
138 In this two-center cohort study, we assessed pretransplant frailty (Fried physical frailty phenotype)
139 ed post-transplant cognitive trajectories by pretransplant frailty, accounting for nonlinear trajecto
140 nt graft rejection was allocated to elevated pretransplant frequencies of CD28 memory T cells.
141 ly, with IFN-gamma-dominated response in the pretransplant group replaced by IL-10-dominated response
142           Thirteen of the 22 patients in the pretransplant group who required 7 or more days of CRRT
143  in the general surgical group and 55 in the pretransplant group.
144     At 3 months, patients who used midodrine pretransplant had significantly (P < 0.05) higher rates
145 s higher in patients with higher proteinuria pretransplant [hazard ratio = 1.869 (95% confidence inte
146 in kidney allograft recipients with negative pretransplant HBc, HCV, EBV, or CMV serology.
147 ch is necessary for those patients with high pretransplant HBV DNA levels, those with limited antivir
148 and hepatitis D virus-negative patients with pretransplant HBV DNA undetectable to 100 IU/mL who rece
149 ality were male gender (HR 2.40, P = 0.001), pretransplant hepatocellular (HR 2.92, P = 0.001) or bil
150                                          For pretransplant HHV8 screening in both donors and recipien
151                                              Pretransplant HIV viral load was undetectable (<50 copie
152 d multivariable-adjusted association between pretransplant HLA class I and II antibodies, as well as
153         In human OLT, posttransplant but not pretransplant HO-1 expression correlated negatively with
154                  High posttransplant but not pretransplant HO-1 expression trended with improved OLT
155                      We investigated whether pretransplant identification of patients with CAD is hel
156                               In conclusion, pretransplant IgA-aB2GP1 was the main risk factor for gr
157                                              Pretransplant immunological risk assessment is currently
158                                            A pretransplant infection by a resistant pathogen was sign
159 ression and preventive strategies, including pretransplant infectious diseases screening and antimicr
160 ore to predict posttransplant outcomes using pretransplant information including routine laboratory d
161                                              Pretransplant, intraoperative, and posttransplant variab
162 Blood, Myllymaki et al evaluated the role of pretransplant leukocyte telomere length (LTL) on surviva
163 ased during the viremic phase and approached pretransplant levels 3 months post-BMT.
164 r increase in donor-specific antibodies from pretransplant levels are associated with adverse outcome
165 ividual's immune system and that recovery of pretransplant levels of catalytic IgG is accompanied by
166 nt viremia was reduced among cases with high pretransplant levels of NKG2C(+) NK cells.
167 were enrolled into 2 strata defined by their pretransplant levels of parathyroid hormone (PTH), low P
168 ABO nonidentical patients (n = 58), provided pretransplant levels of relevant isoagglutinins were bel
169 s remained significantly lower compared with pretransplant levels until CMV reactivation, at which po
170 sttransplant life expectancy; 1 year less of pretransplant life expectancy required an increase of 1.
171                                              Pretransplant life expectancy was valued more highly tha
172 ere observed for tumors in the site-specific pretransplant locations, suggesting tumor recurrences.
173 act of complete pathologic response (cPR) to pretransplant locoregional therapy (LRT) in a large, mul
174         For LT recipients with HCC receiving pretransplant LRT, achieving cPR portends significantly
175                                              Pretransplant, M-MDSC, and monocytes were similar in KTR
176 ategies have been used to deliver siRNA, and pretransplant machine perfusion presents a unique opport
177 1, 1991, and October 20, 2014, and who had a pretransplant magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) severity
178 id organ transplant recipients (SOTR) with a pretransplant malignancy (PTM) are at increased risk for
179 e evaluation of patients with a history of a pretransplant malignancy for transplant candidacy.
180   Our study objective is to identify whether pretransplant malignancy increases the risk for posttran
181                                              Pretransplant malignancy is associated with increased ri
182 than 4000 of these patients were treated for pretransplant malignancy.
183  1.05-1.30) when compared with those without pretransplant malignancy.
184 tified according to the presence and type of pretransplant malignancy.
185 nancy risk differed according to the type of pretransplant malignancy.
186 he risk remained elevated when patients with pretransplant malignant neoplasms (n = 1124) were exclud
187 led to develop a precision-based approach to pretransplant management.
188                                              Pretransplant measurable residual disease (MRD) was moni
189 or avoidance of cold ischemia and allows for pretransplant measurement of function and metabolic stat
190                                 Inclusion of pretransplant measures could provide a more comprehensiv
191 recipient management, immunosuppression, and pretransplant mechanical circulatory support have been a
192  from the EDSS improved significantly from a pretransplant median of 4.0 to 3.0 (interquartile range
193                                 A history of pretransplant melanoma, previous kidney transplantation,
194 ncertainty in outcome metrics, in particular pretransplant metrics, and suggested a need for clear gu
195                                   Detectable pretransplant MFC-MRD was associated with an increased C
196 as for the propensity of midodrine exposure, pretransplant midodrine use was independently associated
197                     Adjusted associations of pretransplant midodrine use with complications at 3 and
198 uclear cells were collected at 3 timepoints (pretransplant, mo 6, mo 12).
199               Patients were screened for DSA pretransplant, monitored regularly posttransplant and wh
200  at 3 months abrogated the adverse impact of pretransplant MRD on CIR and overall survival.
201 anted for high-risk AML or MDS regardless of pretransplant MRD status.
202 ars), there was a significant association of pretransplant MRI severity and baseline verbal comprehen
203                                       Higher pretransplant MRI severity scores were also associated w
204                               Unfortunately, pretransplant MSC administration is unfeasible in deceas
205 9, 57%), and prior peripartum cardiomyopathy pretransplant (n=57, 47%).
206 y the end of the experiment, although early (pretransplant) negative effects of pCO2 on recruitment o
207                           We investigated 13 pretransplant non-HLA antibodies and their association w
208 Luminex Single Antigen Flow Bead assays, 346 pretransplant nonsensitized kidney recipients were scree
209 to acute tubular injury without rejection or pretransplant "normal kidney" biopsy samples.
210 ined for a considerable part by variation in pretransplant NT-proBNP at the time of transplantation.
211                     We want to study whether pretransplant NT-proBNP is associated with posttransplan
212                       Graded associations of pretransplant opioid exposure level with death and graft
213 e sought to analyze the relationship between pretransplant opioid use in lung transplant candidates a
214                                              Pretransplant opioid use was not associated with retrans
215      Recipient ethnicity was associated with pretransplant opioid use.
216                                           No pretransplant or organ donors tested positive for SARS-C
217  such that most patients can be cured in the pretransplant or posttransplant setting.
218                    We reviewed data from the pretransplant organ donor evaluation and local EEEV surv
219  response to calls for an increased focus on pretransplant outcomes and other patient-centered metric
220 obacco use after lung transplantation (LTx), pretransplant patient characteristics associated with to
221  we set out to examine concurrent changes in pretransplant patient complexity, posttransplant surviva
222  we evaluated CMV-CMI every 2 weeks from the pretransplant period until 6 months posttransplantation
223  were always significantly lower than in the pretransplant period.
224                                              Pretransplant pharmacokinetic testing was performed to d
225 lant and 40 posttransplant (including 5 with pretransplant phenotyping).
226                   We prospectively collected pretransplant plasma and urine samples from living and d
227                                          The pretransplant population was censored from further survi
228                                   Therefore, pretransplant predictive markers are needed.
229 ecific T cell phenotype but reversion toward pretransplant profiles over time.
230       Impact on mortality of the recipient's pretransplant PS is principally limited to the first 3 m
231  hematological malignancy, and had available pretransplant pulmonary function test results.
232 ese, 215 (84.6%) were transplanted without a pretransplant PXM.
233      We measured relative telomere length in pretransplant recipient blood samples in 1514 MDS patien
234                                              Pretransplant recipient circulating CD4+CD127lo/-TNFR2+
235 this prospective observational cohort study, pretransplant recipient circulating CD4+CD25+CD127lo/- a
236 mpler alternative to Treg cell function as a pretransplant recipient immune marker for AKI (DGF + SGF
237 otein at recurrence, donor serum sodium, and pretransplant recipient neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio.
238 ly address the perioperative approach to the pretransplant recipient on opioids.
239 s who displayed high levels of catalytic IgG pretransplant recovered high levels of catalytic Abs 2 y
240            Both donors had renal failure and pretransplant renal biopsies showing 100% of the glomeru
241 ation is usually restricted to patients with pretransplant renal impairment, and this strategy could
242 inally, the advances in our understanding of pretransplant risk assessment, and our increasing abilit
243                       Biomarkers relevant to pretransplant risk assessment, early posttransplant care
244                             Four independent pretransplant risk factors were associated with 1-year m
245 of AR in deceased kidney recipients based on pretransplant risk of DGF using a validated model.
246 benefit from eculizumab prophylaxis based on pretransplant risk stratification and support the need f
247 o supplement serum HLA antibody analysis for pretransplant risk stratification in patients with DSA.
248                              With respect to pretransplant risk stratification, we propose a signal-t
249                                      Whether pretransplant rituximab modifies the course of recurrenc
250 hat warrants attention in efforts to improve pretransplant screening and management protocols before
251       We performed serological and molecular pretransplant screening in solid organ transplant (SOT)
252 e studies are needed to define the impact of pretransplant sensitization on lung transplant recipient
253 odified immunosuppression depending on their pretransplant sensitization status.
254                    We prospectively screened pretransplant sera from 543 kidney recipients using sing
255       All four AECAs were detected in 24% of pretransplant sera, and they were associated with post-t
256          JC polyomavirus was not detected in pretransplant serum, however viral loads increased with
257                However, outcomes data in the pretransplant setting, particularly for younger patients
258 tors for posttransplant skin cancer included pretransplant skin cancer (HR, 4.69; 95% CI, 3.26-6.73),
259  index posttransplant cancer were history of pretransplant skin cancer (subhazard ratio, 2.1; 95% CI,
260 , death and graft failure in recipients with pretransplant skin cancer compared with those without ca
261                              Recipients with pretransplant skin cancer had increased risk of PTM (sub
262 idence of PTM in patients with and without a pretransplant skin cancer history was 31.6% and 7.4%, re
263                                              Pretransplant skin cancer was associated with an increas
264           We studied the association between pretransplant skin cancer, PTM, death, and graft failure
265                                              Pretransplant skin malignancy increased the risk of post
266 ded 1671 recipients with and 102 961 without pretransplant skin malignancy.
267                                              Pretransplant solid malignancy also increased the risk o
268 16 DOCK8-deficient patients recruited at the pretransplant stage, and seven patients with autosomal d
269   Patients were categorized by their type of pretransplant support: no support, ECMO only, invasive m
270 tigated a conditioning regimen consisting of pretransplant T cell depletion, low-dose total body irra
271 vers necessitate the development of accurate pretransplant tests of viability.
272 lant irrespective of their MELD meaning that pretransplant therapy cannot reduce costs in such settin
273 t state of LT recipients, identified through pretransplant thromboelastographic (TEG) data among othe
274 ate the evolution of mineral metabolism from pretransplant through the first year after transplantati
275                                Patients with pretransplant titers of 1 or more in 8 received rituxima
276 rved for recipients with antibodies detected pretransplant to AT1R (P = 0.054), ETAR (P = 0.012), and
277    Four patients received rituximab 4 months pretransplant to prevent recurrence.
278 raining samples and IR of 1.23 or greater in pretransplant training samples predicted LTx or ITx reje
279                   Patients who experienced a pretransplant tumor are at significant risk of tumor rec
280                           Time interval from pretransplant tumor occurrence to transplantation and po
281 was compared to that in recipients without a pretransplant tumor.
282 f transplant rejection because patients with pretransplant tumors tended to show improved death-censo
283 ymphocyte, CD19(+), and NK-cell numbers from pretransplant until 15 years posttransplant.
284                                              Pretransplant urinary BKV shedding of donor and recipien
285                                              Pretransplant urinary BKV shedding of donor or recipient
286 entiated memory T cells/muL rejected, median pretransplant values of the biomarkers did not differ be
287  score, the SALT score, using four objective pretransplant variables identifies candidates with AH fo
288  (median [min-max] 71.2 muM [29.2-189.7 muM] pretransplant versus 11.4 muM [8.9-20.2 muM] post-transp
289                                At this time, pretransplant viral screening of donors and recipients i
290                          A similar impact of pretransplant VitD deficiency on relapse risk in myeloid
291                                   Conclusion Pretransplant VitD deficiency was associated with a high
292                 A significant association of pretransplant VitD deficiency with higher relapse rates
293           Patients and Methods The impact of pretransplant VitD status on overall survival, relapse m
294                 In adults, exercise training pretransplant was safe, but there was insufficient evide
295                                We identified pretransplant weight loss and TSP as strong independent
296 velop a predictive tool to identify patients pretransplant with low risk for sustained alcohol use po
297 M was 3 hours shorter than those requiring a pretransplant XM (P < 0.0001).
298 XM) (P < 0.0001), and use of donor blood for pretransplant XM (P < 0.0001).
299 ng transplants despite organ, recipient, and pretransplant XM result being ready, suggesting that the
300 , 1 to 7, 8 to 14, or 15 or more days in the pretransplant year were 51%, 25%, 11%, and 13%.

 
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