What Should Not Be Done After Kidney Transplantation

Following a kidney transplant, recipients must avoid several medications, foods, and lifestyle behaviors that can jeopardize graft function or increase the risk of serious complications.

  1. Medication Avoidance and Safety
  • Avoid NSAIDs:
    Drugs such as ibuprofen, naproxen, and COX-2 inhibitors should not be used because they can cause acute kidney injury and reduce graft function.
  • Avoid Herbal Remedies and Supplements:
    Herbal products—including St. John’s Wort—must be avoided due to dangerous interactions that can lead to rejection or drug toxicity.
  • Do Not Combine Azathioprine with Allopurinol or Febuxostat:
    This combination is potentially fatal and can cause profound, life-threatening pancytopenia.
  • Avoid Unsupervised Switching Between Generics:
    Immunosuppressants should not be switched between brands or generics without close monitoring to ensure stable therapeutic levels.
  • Do Not Delay CNI Initiation:
    Calcineurin inhibitors must be started at the time of transplantation; delaying them increases the risk of early rejection.
  • Avoid Early Use of mTOR Inhibitors:
    mTOR inhibitors should not be started until surgical wounds have healed and graft function is stable, as they impair wound healing.

 

  1. Dietary and Substance Prohibitions
  • Do Not Drink Grapefruit Juice:
    Grapefruit products must be strictly avoided because they interfere with tacrolimus and ciclosporin metabolism, causing dangerously high drug levels.
  • Avoid High-Risk Foods:
    Recipients should not consume raw shellfish, unpasteurized dairy, or other high-infection-risk foods.
  • Do Not Use Tobacco or Recreational Drugs:
    Smoking significantly increases mortality, malignancy risk, and cardiovascular events.
    Recreational drug use must be avoided entirely.
  • Alcohol Should Not Be Consumed in Excess:
    Alcohol intake must remain within national guidelines.

 

  1. Activity and Environmental Restrictions
  • Avoid Contact Sports:
    Sports with a risk of direct trauma to the allograft (e.g., kickboxing) should not be performed.
  • Avoid Unprotected Sun Exposure:
    Recipients should not expose their skin to sunlight without SPF ≥50 and protective clothing due to a very high risk of skin and lip cancer.
  • Do Not Receive Live Vaccines:
    Live attenuated vaccines (varicella, BCG, smallpox, oral typhoid, yellow fever) must be avoided because they can cause severe infection in immunosuppressed patients.
  • Avoid Unsafe Sexual Practices:
    Unprotected sex outside long-term monogamous relationships should be avoided.
    Latex condoms are recommended to reduce exposure to CMV, HIV, HPV, and other infections.

 

  1. Reproductive and Health Planning
  • Do Not Attempt Pregnancy Too Early:
    Women should not try to conceive until at least one year post-transplant with stable graft function.

• Do Not Use MPA or mTOR Inhibitors During Conception:
Mycophenolic acid must be stopped before conception in both men and women due to severe teratogenicity.
mTOR inhibitors should also be discontinued because they can reduce sperm counts.