(HealthDay News) — Patients living with HIV have better outcomes following kidney transplantation than those infected with hepatitis C, or patients infected with both viruses, according to a study ...
It is just as safe and effective for people with HIV in need of kidney transplantation to get their organ from donors who are also HIV positive as it is from donors who are not infected with the virus ...
In HIV-positive recipients, kidney transplantation outcomes from donors with and without HIV are comparable. Kidney graft survival in HIV-positive recipients is good even when the donor also had HIV, ...
Patients with and without HIV had similar 1- and 3-year survival outcomes following kidney transplantation, however, 5-year survival outcomes differed significantly.
Kidney transplantation from donors with HIV appeared to be noninferior to donors without HIV in terms of safety for recipients with HIV, an observational study indicated. Among 198 patients with HIV ...
People in the United States who have HIV and need kidney or liver transplants can now receive organs from donors who also have HIV without having to be part of a research study. The new federal rule ...
Share on Facebook. Opens in a new tab or window Share on Bluesky. Opens in a new tab or window Share on X. Opens in a new tab or window Share on LinkedIn. Opens in a new tab or window A proposed rule ...
It is just as safe and effective for people with HIV in need of kidney transplantation to get their organ from donors who are also HIV positive as it is from donors who are not infected with the virus ...
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