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Deciphering transplant outcomes of expanded kidney allografts donated after controlled circulatory death in the current transplant era. A call for caution.

Authors :
Montero N
Toapanta N
Pallarès N
Crespo M
Diekmann F
Guirado L
Esteban R
Codina S
Melilli E
Buxeda A
Velis G
Torres IB
Revuelta I
Molina Andujar A
Facundo C
Bardají B
Riera L
Fiol M
Cruzado JM
Comas J
Giral M
Naesens M
Åsberg A
Moreso F
Bestard O
Source :
Transplant international : official journal of the European Society for Organ Transplantation [Transpl Int] 2021 Dec; Vol. 34 (12), pp. 2494-2506. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Oct 28.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Outcomes of kidney transplantation (KT) after controlled circulatory death (cDCD) with highly expanded criteria donors (ECD) and recipients have not been thoroughly evaluated. We analyzed in a multicenter cohort of 1161 consecutive KT, granular baseline donor and recipient factors predicting transplant outcomes, selected by bootstrapping and Cox proportional hazards, and were validated in a contemporaneous European KT cohort (n = 1585). 74.3% were DBD and 25.7% cDCD-KT. ECD-KT showed the poorest graft survival rates, irrespective of cDCD or DBD (log-rank < 0.001). Besides standard ECD classification, dialysis vintage, older age, and previous cardiovascular recipient events together with low class-II-HLA match, long cold ischemia time and combining a diabetic donor with a cDCD predicted graft loss (C-Index 0.715, 95% CI 0.675-0.755). External validation showed good prediction accuracy (C-Index 0.697, 95%CI 0.643-0.741). Recipient older age, male gender, dialysis vintage, previous cardiovascular events, and receiving a cDCD independently predicted patient death. Benefit/risk assessment of undergoing KT was compared with concurrent waitlisted candidates, and despite the fact that undergoing KT outperformed remaining waitlisted, remarkably high mortality rates were predicted if KT was undertaken under the worst risk-prediction model. Strategies to increase the donor pool, including cDCD transplants with highly expanded donor and recipient candidates, should be performed with caution.<br /> (© 2021 Steunstichting ESOT. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-2277
Volume :
34
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Transplant international : official journal of the European Society for Organ Transplantation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34626501
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/tri.14131