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Expanding the donor pool for kidney transplantation in India

Authors :
Vivek Balkrishna Kute
Govind Kasat Suresh
Himanshu V Patel
Pankaj R Shah
Pranjal R Modi
Veena R Shah
Jamal S Rizvi
Bipin C Pal
Manisha Pranjal Modi
Priya Sameer Shah
Umesh T Varyani
Pawan S Wakhare
Saiprasad G Shinde
Vijay A Ghodela
Minal H Patel
Varsha B Trivedi
Hargovind L Trivedi
Source :
Indian Journal of Transplantation, Vol 11, Iss 3, Pp 111-116 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications, 2017.

Abstract

The best and most cost-effective treatment for end-stage renal disease patients is living donor (LD) renal transplantation. It has survival benefit compared to deceased donor (DD) kidney transplant (DDKT) and long-term dialysis and provides a better quality of life. Efficient and effective kidney allocation methods are increasingly necessary to address the problem of organ scarcity. The use of kidney paired donation transplant has increased access to LD kidney transplantation (LDKT) with outstanding results. ABO-incompatible kidney transplantation (KT) and desensitization protocol can expand the donor pool, but as integral to any aggressive immunosuppression protocol, they are associated with increased risk of infection and malignancy. Given the widespread organ shortage, DDKT from donors with sepsis, donors who died from snakebite or acute kidney injury, controlled donation after cardiac death, older donors, can be considered for KT with an acceptable outcome. The acceptable outcome can be achieved with dual KT using kidneys from expanded criteria donors in older population. Dual KT from pediatric donors to adult recipients or from adult marginal DDs is a promising way to expand the donor pool. Carefully selected donor with HIV, HCV, and HBV positivity is not a contraindication for living kidney donation. Careful and meticulous selection of patient and donor is essential for successful outcome. Affordable or free transplantation is other way to increase transplantation rate in developing country. The community support can make transplantation available free to the poor patients under community-government partnership. Various steps should be taken to promote LDKT and DDKT program.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22120017 and 22120025
Volume :
11
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Indian Journal of Transplantation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.92a30cd4f98473b8f2e531d94478f97
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4103/ijot.ijot_34_17