1. Impact of ABO-Incompatible Living Donor Kidney Transplantation on Patient Survival.
- Author
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Massie AB, Orandi BJ, Waldram MM, Luo X, Nguyen AQ, Montgomery RA, Lentine KL, and Segev DL
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Graft Rejection immunology, Graft Survival, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate trends, United States epidemiology, ABO Blood-Group System immunology, Graft Rejection mortality, Kidney Transplantation mortality, Living Donors, Registries, Transplant Recipients
- Abstract
Rationale & Objective: Compared with recipients of blood group ABO-compatible (ABOc) living donor kidney transplants (LDKTs), recipients of ABO-incompatible (ABOi) LDKTs have higher risk for graft loss, particularly in the first few weeks after transplantation. However, the decision to proceed with ABOi LDKT should be based on a comparison of the alternative: waiting for future ABOc LDKTs (eg, through kidney paired exchange) or for a deceased donor kidney transplant (DDKT). We sought to evaluate the patient survival difference between ABOi LDKTs and waiting for an ABOc LDKT or an ABOc DDKT., Study Design: Retrospective cohort study of adults in the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients., Setting & Participants: 808 ABOi LDKT recipients and 2,423 matched controls from among 245,158 adult first-time kidney-only waitlist registrants who did not receive an ABOi LDKT and who remained on the waitlist or received either an ABOc LDKT or an ABOc DDKT, 2002 to 2017., Exposure: Receipt of ABOi LDKT., Outcome: Death., Analytical Approach: We compared mortality among ABOi LDKT recipients versus a weighted matched comparison population using Cox proportional hazards regression and Cox models that accommodated for changing hazard ratios over time., Results: Compared with matched controls, ABOi LDKT was associated with greater mortality risk in the first 30 days posttransplantation (cumulative survival of 99.0% vs 99.6%) but lower mortality risk beyond 180 days posttransplantation. Patients who received an ABOi LDKT had higher cumulative survival at 5 and 10 years (90.0% and 75.4%, respectively) than similar patients who remained on the waitlist or received an ABOc LDKT or ABOc DDKT (81.9% and 68.4%, respectively)., Limitations: No measurement of ABO antibody titers in recipients; eligibility of participants for kidney paired donation is unknown., Conclusions: Transplant candidates who receive an ABOi LDKT and survive more than 180 days posttransplantation experience a long-term survival benefit compared to remaining on the waitlist to potentially receive an ABOc kidney transplant., (Copyright © 2020 National Kidney Foundation, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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