On March 12, 2026, the global community marks the 21st World Kidney Day, with the theme “Kidney Health for All: Caring for People, Protecting the Planet.”

For patients with end-stage kidney disease, kidney transplantation represents a life-changing treatment that can restore quality of life and offer a “second chance.” However, transplantation success is only the beginning of a long journey. Lifelong immunosuppressive therapy—while essential for preventing rejection—also exposes recipients to a significant risk: infection.

Infections have become the second leading cause of death after cardiovascular disease among kidney transplant recipients. Achieving a delicate balance between anti-rejection therapy and infection prevention to ensure long-term graft and patient survival remains a major challenge in clinical practice.

Major Challenges in Infection Prevention and Control in Kidney Transplant Recipients

1. A Unique Host: High Infection Risk Under Immunosuppression

Kidney transplant recipients require long-term use of immunosuppressive agents, including calcineurin inhibitors and antimetabolites, which suppress T-cell function and significantly reduce the body’s ability to clear pathogens such as bacteria, viruses, and fungi.

As a result, these patients are not only more susceptible to common infections but also at increased risk of opportunistic infections.

2. Complex Pathogens: Prevalence of Multidrug-Resistant Organisms

Multiple factors contribute to infection risk in kidney transplant recipients, including:

Donor-derived infections

High-dose immunosuppressive therapy

Use of broad-spectrum antibiotics

Invasive medical procedures

Infections in this population are characterized by bacterial pathogens as the predominant cause, followed by viral and fungal infections, as well as other opportunistic pathogens.

Kidney transplant recipients are also a high-risk group for Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PJP), particularly during the first six months after transplantation and following intensified anti-rejection therapy.

A German transplant cohort study reported that among 804 kidney transplant recipients, bacteria accounted for 66.4% of infections (645/972), followed by viruses (28.9%) and fungi (4.7%).

Among bacterial infections, Gram-negative bacteria predominated. The most common pathogens included:

Escherichia coli

Klebsiella pneumoniae

Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Acinetobacter species

In China, carbapenem resistance rates among transplant recipients are significantly higher than those observed in the general population.

Examples include:

Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae: 39.7% (200/504)

Carbapenem-resistant E. coli: 6.1% (21/347)

Carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB): 59.9% (106/177)

Carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa (CRPA): 35.5% (49/138)

Infections caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria pose a serious threat, with mortality rates reaching up to 40.4%.

3. Diagnostic and Therapeutic Challenges

Immunosuppression often masks classical symptoms and inflammatory markers of infection, leading to delayed diagnosis.

Treatment decisions are also complicated by the need to consider:

Nephrotoxicity of anti-infective drugs

Drug interactions with immunosuppressants

Potential impact on graft function

These factors significantly narrow the therapeutic window for antimicrobial treatment.

Anti-Infective Treatment Strategies

Given the complexity of infections in kidney transplant recipients, a multilayered treatment strategy is required.

1. Rapid and Accurate Diagnosis

When severe infection caused by multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria is suspected, guidelines recommend performing rapid pathogen identification and resistance enzyme detection alongside conventional culture and susceptibility testing.

Recent advances in rapid diagnostics include:

Multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR)

Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS)

Resistance mechanisms can also be identified through molecular and protein-based assays.

2. Precision Therapy Based on Resistance Mechanisms

According to the Chinese Clinical Guidelines for Multidrug-Resistant Bacterial Infections in Kidney Transplantation (2023), treatment strategies should be tailored according to resistance profiles.

ESBL-producing Enterobacterales (ESBL-E)

Severe infection: carbapenems preferred

Mild-to-moderate infection: β-lactam/β-lactamase inhibitor combinations

Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE)

Treatment depends on the type of carbapenemase:

KPC or OXA-48 positive:

first-line ceftazidime–avibactam

Metallo-β-lactamase (MBL) positive:

ceftazidime–avibactam + aztreonam

Alternative options may include:

Polymyxin-based combination therapy

Tigecycline or eravacycline (for non-bloodstream and non-UTI infections)

Multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa

If susceptible to non-carbapenem β-lactams, these agents are preferred and should be administered via prolonged infusion at high doses.

For difficult-to-treat resistant strains, ceftazidime–avibactam or polymyxin-based combination therapy may be used.

Carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB)

Recommended regimen:

High-dose sulbactam (6–9 g/day)

combined with at least one active agent such as:

Cefoperazone

Polymyxin B

Eravacycline

Tigecycline

Minocycline

Fosfomycin and rifampin are not recommended in CRAB combination therapy.

Stenotrophomonas maltophilia

Combination therapy with two agents is recommended, chosen from:

Minocycline / tigecycline / eravacycline

Levofloxacin

Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX)

MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus)

Therapeutic options include:

Linezolid

Daptomycin

Vancomycin

Teicoplanin

These may be used alone or combined with agents such as fosfomycin or rifampin.

VRE (Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus)

Recommended treatment includes:

Oxazolidinones

or

High-dose daptomycin

Nephrotoxicity Management

When antibiotics are used in kidney transplant recipients, clinicians must carefully balance benefits and risks, especially with nephrotoxic agents such as:

Aminoglycosides

Polymyxins

Vancomycin

Therapeutic drug monitoring should guide dosing whenever possible, while renal injury biomarkers (serum creatinine, urine protein, cystatin C) should be closely monitored.

Drug doses should be adjusted according to creatinine clearance or estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR).

Emerging Antimicrobial Agents

As antimicrobial resistance continues to rise, new antibiotics are becoming increasingly important.

In 2025, several new agents were approved in China, including:

Aztreonam–avibactam

Imipenem derivatives

Telavancin

In January 2026, the siderophore cephalosporin cefiderocol was approved in China for the treatment of complicated urinary tract infections (cUTI) caused by susceptible Gram-negative pathogens.

Cefiderocol: Mechanism and Antibacterial Spectrum

Cefiderocol uses a siderophore-mediated iron transport mechanism to penetrate the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria.

It demonstrates strong in vitro activity against carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative organisms, including:

Klebsiella pneumoniae

Escherichia coli

Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Acinetobacter baumannii

Stenotrophomonas maltophilia

Clinical Evidence

The APEKS-cUTI international multicenter trial demonstrated that cefiderocol achieved non-inferiority to imipenem–cilastatin in microbiological eradication and clinical response.

The CREDIBLE-CR study further confirmed its efficacy in infections caused by carbapenem-resistant pathogens.

A multicenter retrospective study (CEFI-ID) including 114 immunocompromised patients with multidrug-resistant Gram-negative infections—many with hematologic malignancies or solid organ transplants—also demonstrated promising outcomes.

Role in Empirical Therapy

A 2025 systematic review suggested that cefiderocol may be a promising option for empirical therapy in critically ill patients at high risk for MDR Gram-negative infections, due to its broad activity and stability against multiple β-lactamases.

This may be particularly relevant in kidney transplant recipients with a high risk of MDR infection.

Considerations in Clinical Use

Despite its promise, cefiderocol should be used cautiously. Key considerations include:

Uncertain optimal role in Acinetobacter infections

Potential emergence of resistance

Unclear preference for monotherapy versus combination therapy

Treatment decisions should therefore be guided by pathogen identification, resistance patterns, and local epidemiology.

Comprehensive Management Strategies

Effective infection prevention after kidney transplantation requires multidisciplinary management.

Individualized Immunosuppression

During infection treatment, clinicians must balance the risks of infection and rejection by adjusting immunosuppressive therapy appropriately.

Typically:

Reduce or discontinue antimetabolites first

Adjust calcineurin inhibitors under therapeutic monitoring

Carefully control corticosteroid dosage

Individualized Duration of Therapy

Urinary tract infections in kidney transplant recipients generally require longer treatment courses than in the general population.

For other infections, duration should be determined based on:

Clinical symptoms

Laboratory markers

Microbiological findings

Imaging results

Infection site

Immunosuppressive status

Emerging Therapies

Bacteriophage therapy remains under investigation but may provide a future option for refractory multidrug-resistant infections after transplantation.

Multidisciplinary Collaboration

Optimal management requires a multidisciplinary team including:

Transplant surgeons

Infectious disease specialists

Clinical pharmacists

Microbiologists

Nephrologists

Such collaboration ensures comprehensive, individualized care throughout the patient journey.


Conclusion

Preventing and managing infections after kidney transplantation is a complex clinical challenge requiring a careful balance between immunosuppression and infection control.

By integrating:

Rapid diagnostic technologies

Mechanism-based precision antimicrobial therapy

Individualized immunosuppression adjustment

Innovative treatment approaches

clinicians can better protect both graft function and patient survival, ultimately helping kidney transplant recipients achieve long-term, high-quality survival and advancing the vision of “Kidney Health for All.”

Prof. Lei Liu