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16 April 2026 : Original article  

[In Press] Prevalence and Risk Factors of Hepatic Steatosis in Kidney Transplant Recipients

Monika Górska ORCID logo1ABCDEF, Filip Wróbel ORCID logo2ABCDEF, Marta Rząsa2ABCDEF, Ilona Kurnatowska ORCID logo1ACDEF

DOI: 10.12659/AOT.952251

Ann Transplant In Press; DOI: 10.12659/AOT.952251  

Available online: 2026-04-16, In Press, Corrected Proof

Publication in the "In-Press" formula aims at speeding up the public availability of the pending manuscript while waiting for the final publication. The assigned DOI number is active and citable. The availability of the article in the Medline, PubMed and PMC databases as well as Web of Science will be obtained after the final publication according to the journal schedule

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Kidney failure and hepatic steatosis (HS) are core elements of cardiovascular-renal-metabolic syndrome. Evidence of HS in kidney transplant (KTx) recipients remains limited. We evaluated the prevalence and determinants of de novo hepatic steatosis (dnHS) after KTx.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
We retrospectively analyzed adult KTx recipients from a single outpatient center without HS prior to transplantation. Anthropometric data, laboratory results, comorbidities, and medication use were evaluated. HS was diagnosed based on ultrasonography.
RESULTS
In 127 (53 female) KTx recipients with median age of 56.91 (44.91-64.62) years and median estimated glomerular filtration rate of 39.6 (29.76-48.51) mL/min/1.73 m², 44 patients (30.1%) had dnHS. Patients in the dnHS and nonHS groups were of comparable age, sex, and graft function. Patients in the dnHS group had significantly higher body mass index (BMI) before (25.5±3.29 vs 23.26±3.55 kg/m²; P<0.001) and after KTx (27.86±4.06 vs 24.71±3.69 kg/m²; P<0.001), and dnHS was associated with higher rates of hyperlipidemia (77.3% vs 54.2%; P=0.012), hyperuricemia (52.3% vs 28.9%; P=0.009), and ischemic heart disease (34.1% vs 13.1%, P=0.006). In multivariable logistic regression, higher post-KTx BMI (OR=1.21; 95% CI, 1.08-1.37; P=0.002) and history of ischemic heart disease (OR=3.40; 95% CI, 1.18-9.74; P=0.023) were independently associated with the presence of dnHS.
CONCLUSIONS
Hepatic steatosis is common among KTx recipients and is strongly associated with metabolic comorbidity, particularly higher BMI and ischemic heart disease.

Keywords: Hepatic Steatosis; Kidney Transplantation; Metabolic Syndrome

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Annals of Transplantation eISSN: 2329-0358
Annals of Transplantation eISSN: 2329-0358