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Patient and Kidney Allograft Survival with National Kidney Paired Donation
- Source :
- Clin J Am Soc Nephrol
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Background and objectives In the United States, kidney paired donation networks have facilitated an increasing proportion of kidney transplants annually, but transplant outcome differences beyond 5 years between paired donation and other living donor kidney transplant recipients have not been well described. Design, setting, participants, & measurements Using registry-linked data, we compared National Kidney Registry (n=2363) recipients to control kidney transplant recipients (n=54,497) (February 2008 to December 2017). We estimated the risk of death-censored graft failure and mortality using inverse probability of treatment weighted Cox regression. The parsimonious model adjusted for recipient factors (age, sex, black, race, body mass index ≥30 kg/m2, diabetes, previous transplant, preemptive transplant, public insurance, hepatitis C, eGFR, antibody depleting induction therapy, year of transplant), donor factors (age, sex, Hispanic ethnicity, body mass index ≥30 kg/m2), and transplant factors (zero HLA mismatch). Results National Kidney Registry recipients were more likely to be women, black, older, on public insurance, have panel reactive antibodies >80%, spend longer on dialysis, and be previous transplant recipients. National Kidney Registry recipients were followed for a median 3.7 years (interquartile range, 2.1–5.6; maximum 10.9 years). National Kidney Registry recipients had similar graft failure (5% versus 6%; log-rank P=0.2) and mortality (9% versus 10%; log-rank P=0.4) incidence compared with controls during follow-up. After adjustment for donor, recipient, and transplant factors, there no detectable difference in graft failure (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.95; 95% confidence interval, 0.77 to 1.18; P=0.6) or mortality (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.86; 95% confidence interval, 0.70 to 1.07; P=0.2) between National Kidney Registry and control recipients. Conclusions Even after transplanting patients with greater risk factors for worse post-transplant outcomes, nationalized paired donation results in equivalent outcomes when compared with control living donor kidney transplant recipients.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Time Factors
Tissue and Organ Procurement
Epidemiology
medicine.medical_treatment
030232 urology & nephrology
030230 surgery
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Risk Assessment
Donor Selection
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Interquartile range
Risk Factors
Internal medicine
medicine
Living Donors
Humans
Registries
Kidney transplantation
Dialysis
Transplantation
Proportional hazards model
business.industry
Hazard ratio
Graft Survival
Panel reactive antibody
Editorials
Hepatitis C
Middle Aged
medicine.disease
Kidney Transplantation
United States
Treatment Outcome
Nephrology
Case-Control Studies
Female
business
Body mass index
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1555905X
- Volume :
- 15
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology : CJASN
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....08d3b99f166e8a8076d0d142b00f6efb