For patients with plasma cell dyscrasias who progress to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD), kidney transplantation has historically been considered too risky, with high rates of recurrence and disappointing outcomes. But with the advent of highly effective therapies for multiple myeloma, AL amyloidosis, and MGRS (monoclonal gammopathy of renal significance), survival is improving, and the conversation around transplant is shifting.
A panel of experts in transplant nephrology, hematology/oncology, renal pathology, and infectious diseases reviewed the latest evidence and highlighted how advances in disease control, risk stratification, and multidisciplinary care may open the door to transplantation for a group of patients once largely excluded. Their work underscores both the promise and the challenges of expanding access to kidney transplantation in this population.
The panel’s recommendations were published in Kidney International, and Nephrology Times spoke with two of the paper’s authors, Naoka Murakami, MD, PhD, of Washington University, and Heather Landau, MD, of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.