Standardized sonographic parameters POV and PVD show association with chronic injury in kidney transplant dysfunction
A retrospective single-center cohort study analyzed 350 kidney transplant biopsies performed between 2013 and 2022. The study evaluated the association between standardized color-coded duplex sonography (CCDS) parameters—percentage of vascularization (POV), periphery vessel distance (PVD), and resistive index (RI)—and histopathologic findings based on Banff criteria in kidney transplant recipients undergoing biopsy for allograft dysfunction.
The main results showed that POV > 50% had independent negative predictors including recipient age, severe tubular atrophy (ct), and arterial intimal fibrosis (cv). PVD ≥ 0.25 cm was associated with recipient age and moderate tubular atrophy (ct). No association was found between RI and histopathologic lesions. Specific effect sizes, absolute numbers, and p-values or confidence intervals were not reported for these associations.
Safety and tolerability data were not reported. The primary limitation is the retrospective single-center design. The study's practice relevance is that CCDS parameters POV and PVD may serve as non-invasive markers of chronic allograft injury and could support—but not replace—biopsy evaluation in clinical assessment. Biopsy remains essential for establishing a definitive diagnosis in graft dysfunction.