1. Simultaneous pancreas‐kidney transplantation in Caucasian versus African American patients: Does recipient race influence outcomes?
- Author
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Jeffrey Rogers, Colleen L. Jay, Alan C. Farney, Giuseppe Orlando, Marie L. Jacobs, David Harriman, Venkat Gurram, Berjesh Sharda, Komal Gurung, Amber Reeves‐Daniel, William Doares, Scott Kaczmorski, Alejandra Mena‐Gutierrez, Natalia Sakhovskaya, Michael D. Gautreaux, and Robert J. Stratta
- Subjects
Black or African American ,Graft Rejection ,Transplantation ,Treatment Outcome ,Graft Survival ,Humans ,Pancreas Transplantation ,Kidney Transplantation ,Pancreas ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
The influence of African American (AA) recipient race on outcomes following simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation (SPKT) is uncertain.From 11/01 to 2/19, we retrospectively studied 158 Caucasian (C) and 57 AA patients (pts) undergoing SPKT.The AA group had fewer patients on peritoneal dialysis (30% C vs. 14% AA), more patients with longer dialysis duration (28% C vs. 51% AA), more sensitized (PRA ≥20%) patients (6% C vs. 21% AA), and more patients with pretransplant C-peptide levels ≥2.0 ng/ml (11% C vs. 35% AA, all P .05). With a mean 9.2 year follow-up, patient survival (65% C vs. 77% AA, P = .098) slightly favored the AA group, whereas kidney (55% C vs. 60% AA) and pancreas (48% C vs. 54% AA) graft survival rates (GSRs) were comparable. Death-censored kidney (71% C vs. 68% AA) and pancreas (both 62%) GSRs demonstrated that death with a functioning graft (DWFG) was more common in C vs. AA patients (23% C vs. 12% AA, P = .10). The incidence of death-censored dual graft loss (usually rejection) was 7% C versus 21% AA (P = .005).Following SPKT, AA patients are at a greater risk for dual immunological graft loss whereas C patients are at greater risk for DWFG.
- Published
- 2022
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