1. A Multinational Cohort Study Examining Sex Differences in Excess Risk of Death With Graft Function After Kidney Transplant.
- Author
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Vinson AJ, Zhang X, Dahhou M, Süsal C, Döhler B, Sapir-Pichhadze R, Cardinal H, Melk A, Wong G, Francis A, Pilmore H, and Foster BJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Sex Factors, Adult, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Child, Infant, Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Young Adult, Australia epidemiology, Infant, Newborn, New Zealand epidemiology, Risk Assessment, Tissue Donors statistics & numerical data, Aged, Age Factors, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Kidney Transplantation mortality, Registries, Graft Survival
- Abstract
Background: Kidney transplant recipients show sex differences in excess overall mortality risk that vary by donor sex and recipient age. However, whether the excess risk of death with graft function (DWGF) differs by recipient sex is unknown., Methods: In this study, we combined data from 3 of the largest transplant registries worldwide (Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipient, Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry, and Collaborative Transplant Study) using individual patient data meta-analysis to compare the excess risk of DWGF between male and female recipients of a first deceased donor kidney transplant (1988-2019), conditional on donor sex and recipient age., Results: Among 463 895 individuals examined, when the donor was male, female recipients aged 0 to 12 y experienced a higher excess risk of DWGF than male recipients (relative excess risk 1.68; 95% confidence interval, 1.24-2.29); there were no significant differences in other age intervals or at any age when the donor was female. There was no statistically significant between-cohort heterogeneity., Conclusions: Given the lack of sex differences in the excess risk of DWGF (other than in prepubertal recipients of a male donor kidney) and the known greater excess overall mortality risk for female recipients compared with male recipients in the setting of a male donor, future study is required to characterize potential sex-specific causes of death after graft loss., Competing Interests: A.J.V. has accepted consulting fees and fellowship grant funding from Paladin Labs Inc. A.M. is supported by grants from the German Research Foundation (DFG; ME 3696/5-1 and ME3696/3-1) and the Lower Saxony Ministry of Science and Culture. C.S. is supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (grant 952512). G.W. is supported by National Health and Medical Research Council Investigator (APP 1195414) and Career Development Fellowship (APP 1147657). R.S.-P. is supported by a Fonds de recherche du Quebec—Santé chercheur boursier clinician award (grant 254386) and Canadian Institutes of Health Research (grant FRN-156730). The other authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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