Francis Tinney, MD, Tommy Ivanics, MD, Joel Stracke, DO, Lauren Malinzak, MD, Ahmed M. Elsabbagh, MD, Tracci McEvoy, PA, Shunji Nagai, MD, and Atsushi Yoshida, MD
Background. Living donor robotic-assisted kidney transplantation (RAKT) is an alternative to open kidney transplantation (OKT), but experience with this technique is limited in the United States. Methods. A retrospective review of living donor kidney transplants performed between 2016 and 2018 compared RAKT with OKT with regard to recipient, donor, and perioperative parameters. A 1:1 propensity score matching was performed on recipient/donor age, sex, body mass index, race, preoperative dialysis, and calculated panel reactive antibodies. Results. Outcomes of patient survival, graft survival, and postoperative complications were assessed for 139 transplants (47 RAKT and 92 OKT). Propensity score analysis (47:47) showed that RAKT recipients had longer warm ischemic times (49 versus 40 min; P