Navigating complex clinical decisions: kidney transplantation following abdominal aorto-aortic bypass in infantile Takayasu arteritis
Moran Plonsky Toder, Rami Tibi, Ran Steinberg, Tony Karram, Aharon Hoffman, Dawn Coleman, Irina Libinson-Zebegret, Renata Yakubov, Israel Eisenstein, Daniella Magen, Shirley Pollack

TL;DR
A young boy with infantile Takayasu arteritis successfully underwent kidney transplantation after major vascular surgery, showing long-term remission.
Contribution
This is one of the youngest reported cases of successful kidney transplantation in infantile Takayasu arteritis following vascular surgery.
Findings
The patient maintained excellent kidney graft function 18 months post-transplant.
No signs of TAK recurrence were observed after transplantation.
The case highlights the potential for successful transplantation under standard immunosuppression without anti-TNFα.
Abstract
Takayasu arteritis (TAK) is a granulomatous large-vessel vasculitis typically affecting young adult females. Pediatric cases are rare, and infantile onset is exceptional. Management relies on immunosuppression, with surgery reserved for severe complications. We describe a now 5.5-year-old boy diagnosed with TAK at six months of age, presenting with hypertensive encephalopathy and kidney dysfunction. Despite treatment with corticosteroids and anti-TNFα, his kidney function deteriorated, leading to kidney failure and dialysis. At nearly three years of age, he underwent abdominal aorto-aortic bypass and bilateral nephrectomy due to progressive vascular narrowing and refractory hypertension. At age four, he successfully received a deceased-donor kidney transplant. Eighteen months post-transplant, he maintains excellent graft function and shows no signs of TAK recurrence. This case…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVasculitis and related conditions · Renal Diseases and Glomerulopathies · Renal and Vascular Pathologies
