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Apex Nursing

Guide — Renal

Kidney Transplant Nursing Guide

Pre-transplant evaluation, surgical placement, rejection types (hyperacute/acute/chronic), immunosuppression medications, post-transplant nursing priorities, infection risk management, and patient education for kidney transplant nursing.

12 min read · Renal

Educational use only. Transplant nursing is a specialized field. Clinical protocols vary by institution and transplant program. Always follow center-specific guidelines. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Transplant Basics

Surgical placementHeterotopic (iliac fossa — right > left). Native kidneys usually left in place (unless causing hypertension or recurrent UTIs). Donor ureter anastomosed to recipient bladder.
Donor typesLiving donor (related or unrelated — better outcomes) vs Deceased donor (brain-dead donor or donation after circulatory death/DCD — more common).
HLA matchingHuman leukocyte antigen (HLA) compatibility reduces rejection risk. Perfect 6/6 antigen match = best; 0/6 = highest rejection risk. Crossmatch testing detects preformed antibodies.
Delayed graft function (DGF)Kidney does not function immediately post-transplant (requires dialysis in first week). More common with deceased donor kidneys. Usually resolves — not rejection. Monitor closely; do NOT assume rejection without biopsy.
Pre-transplant evaluationPRA (panel-reactive antibody level), ABO blood type compatibility, cardiac evaluation, cancer screening, infection screening (HIV, hepatitis B/C, CMV, EBV — all affect post-transplant management), psychosocial evaluation, medication adherence assessment.

Rejection Types

Hyperacute Rejection

Timing: Minutes to hours after reperfusion · Reversibility: NO — irreversible

MechanismPreformed recipient antibodies (anti-HLA) bind to donor endothelium → complement activation → thrombosis → immediate graft necrosis
PresentationImmediate loss of graft function during surgery; kidney turns dusky/blue-black; no urine output
TreatmentNo treatment possible — graft must be removed (transplant nephrectomy)
Nursing ActionRecognize post-operative anuric patient in OR who has no urine output — immediate notification to surgeon. Post-transplant: prepare patient for graft loss discussion.

Acute Rejection

Timing: Days to weeks (typically within 3–12 months; can occur anytime) · Reversibility: OFTEN REVERSIBLE with early detection and treatment

MechanismT-cell mediated (cellular rejection) or antibody-mediated (humoral). T cells recognize donor HLA antigens → cytokine release → inflammatory infiltration → tubular injury
PresentationRising creatinine, decreased urine output, graft tenderness, fever, hypertension. Often asymptomatic early — detected on routine creatinine monitoring.
TreatmentPulse corticosteroids (IV methylprednisolone 500 mg–1g × 3 days). Antibody-mediated: plasmapheresis + IVIG + rituximab.
Nursing ActionDaily creatinine monitoring. Immediately report any creatinine rise above baseline. Teach patient: any fever, decreased UO, or graft tenderness = call provider IMMEDIATELY. Adherence to immunosuppression is critical.

Chronic Rejection / Chronic Allograft Nephropathy

Timing: Months to years (typically > 1 year post-transplant) · Reversibility: NO — irreversible (most common cause of late graft loss)

MechanismComplex combination of immune-mediated (antibody-mediated, T-cell) and non-immune factors (hypertension, calcineurin inhibitor nephrotoxicity, ischemia, diabetes). Progressive fibrosis and intimal hyperplasia.
PresentationGradual creatinine rise, proteinuria, hypertension. Ultimately graft failure requiring return to dialysis or retransplantation.
TreatmentNo treatment reverses it. Manage risk factors. Optimize immunosuppression. Prepare for return to dialysis or retransplant listing.
Nursing ActionLong-term monitoring: creatinine trends, proteinuria, BP control. Educate on lifestyle modifications. Emotional support — chronic rejection is the leading cause of long-term graft loss.

Immunosuppression Medications

Tacrolimus (FK506, Prograf)

Calcineurin inhibitor — primary maintenance immunosuppressant

MechanismInhibits calcineurin → blocks IL-2 production → T-cell inactivation
MonitoringTrough level (before morning dose). Target varies: 8–12 ng/mL (early), 5–8 ng/mL (late). Creatinine, glucose, BP, lipids.
Side EffectsNephrotoxicity, hypertension, hyperglycemia (post-transplant diabetes mellitus), hyperkalemia, neurotoxicity (tremors, headache, insomnia), hypomagnesemia, drug interactions
Nursing NotesSame time daily (every 12 hours). NEVER skip doses. Trough level drawn before morning dose. Report tremors, HA, rising glucose, or creatinine. Do NOT take with grapefruit juice (inhibits CYP3A4 → supratherapeutic levels).

Mycophenolate Mofetil (MMF, CellCept) / Mycophenolic acid (MPA)

Antiproliferative — anti-metabolite

MechanismInhibits inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH) → blocks purine synthesis → inhibits T and B cell proliferation
MonitoringCBC (neutropenia risk), GI tolerance. MPA levels at some centers.
Side EffectsGI toxicity (N/V/D, abdominal cramps), leukopenia (neutropenia), anemia, infection risk, teratogenic
Nursing NotesGive with food to reduce GI side effects. Enteric-coated formulation (Myfortic) also available. Report any signs of infection. TERATOGENIC — counsel women of childbearing age on contraception. Handle capsules with care (wash hands, no crushing).

Prednisone / Methylprednisolone

Corticosteroid — anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive

MechanismInhibits cytokine production (IL-1, IL-2, IL-6, TNF), blocks phospholipase A2, reduces inflammation
MonitoringBlood glucose (steroid-induced hyperglycemia), BP, weight, bone density (long-term), eye exam (cataracts), mood.
Side EffectsCushing features (moon face, buffalo hump), hyperglycemia, HTN, osteoporosis, cataracts, adrenal suppression, impaired wound healing, infection risk, mood changes
Nursing NotesNever abruptly stop — taper to avoid adrenal crisis. Take with food to reduce GI irritation. Monitor blood glucose closely, especially in first weeks post-transplant. Teach patient: infection signs are masked by steroids. Bone protection: calcium, vitamin D, bisphosphonates.

Basiliximab (Simulect)

IL-2 receptor antagonist — induction agent

MechanismMonoclonal antibody — blocks IL-2 receptor on activated T cells → prevents T-cell proliferation during high-risk early period
MonitoringNo therapeutic drug monitoring. Monitor for hypersensitivity reactions.
Side EffectsWell tolerated. Rare: anaphylaxis, hypersensitivity. Does not increase overall infection risk significantly.
Nursing NotesAdministered as IV infusion. Monitor for infusion reactions. Used as induction to provide additional immunosuppression during the first weeks when rejection risk is highest.

Post-Transplant Nursing Priorities

PriorityNursing Action
Urine output monitoringHourly UO in immediate post-op. Goal > 30 mL/hr (often much higher in first 24–48h). Sudden decrease = call provider immediately (rejection, obstruction, thrombosis, or volume depletion).
Creatinine trendDaily creatinine in early post-transplant. Rising creatinine = rejection vs drug toxicity vs obstruction — requires evaluation and often biopsy. Do NOT assume one cause without workup.
Blood pressureTarget < 130/80 mmHg. Hypertension common post-transplant (tacrolimus, cyclosporine, steroid effects). Anti-hypertensives as ordered. Avoid hypotension (reduces graft perfusion).
Infection preventionHighest infection risk in first 6 months (highest immunosuppression). Universal precautions, strict hand hygiene, no fresh flowers or standing water in room (Aspergillus), food safety (no raw/undercooked food). Prophylactic medications: TMP-SMX (PCP prophylaxis), valganciclovir (CMV prophylaxis if indicated), antifungals.
Blood glucosePost-transplant diabetes mellitus (PTDM) occurs in ~15–30% (steroids + tacrolimus). Monitor blood glucose QID initially. Sliding scale insulin or standing insulin as ordered.
Wound careSteroids impair wound healing. Assess surgical site for dehiscence, hematoma, lymphocele. Foley catheter care (usually removed at day 5–7 once anastomosis healed). Report any drainage or fever.
Medication complianceNEVER skip immunosuppression. Even one missed dose can trigger rejection. Medication reconciliation at every contact. Teach: always refill before running out. Avoid grapefruit with tacrolimus/cyclosporine.

Patient Education Priorities

  • Medications: Never stop immunosuppression without provider guidance — this causes rejection. Take at exactly the same time each day.
  • Signs of rejection to report immediately: decreased urine output, weight gain, swelling, fever, graft tenderness, rising creatinine (on home monitoring).
  • Infection signs to report: fever > 38°C (100.4°F), dysuria, respiratory symptoms, wound redness/drainage.
  • Sun protection: Immunosuppression dramatically increases skin cancer risk — daily sunscreen SPF 50+, protective clothing, annual dermatology screening.
  • Diet and food safety: Avoid raw or undercooked meat/fish (Listeria, Salmonella risk). Wash produce. Avoid grapefruit and grapefruit juice.
  • Follow-up: Frequent laboratory monitoring (initially weekly, then monthly, then quarterly). Never miss appointments — silent rejection is detected only on labs.
  • Vaccinations: No live vaccines post-transplant. Inactivated vaccines recommended (influenza annually, pneumococcal). Verify all vaccines before transplant while still immunocompetent.

NCLEX Pearls

Hyperacute rejection: minutes to hours, preformed antibodies, irreversible — graft removed. Prevented by crossmatch.

Acute rejection: days to weeks, T-cell mediated, often reversible with pulse steroids. Report rising creatinine immediately.

Chronic rejection: months to years, most common cause of long-term graft loss, irreversible.

Tacrolimus trough drawn BEFORE morning dose. No grapefruit — inhibits CYP3A4 → toxic levels.

No live vaccines post-transplant (MMR, varicella, live attenuated influenza, yellow fever).

Kidney is placed in iliac fossa (heterotopic) — NOT in the original kidney location.

Immunosuppression = infection risk. Low-grade fever in transplant recipient = emergency — may not have normal inflammatory response.

Delayed graft function ≠ rejection — DGF requires dialysis post-op but usually resolves. Biopsy differentiates DGF from rejection.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with KDIGO Clinical Practice Guidelines · National Kidney Foundation (NKF). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →