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Urine Injury Biomarkers Are Not Associated With Kidney Transplant Failure.

Authors :
Koyawala N
Reese PP
Hall IE
Jia Y
Thiessen-Philbrook HR
Mansour SG
Doshi MD
Akalin E
Bromberg JS
Harhay MN
Mohan S
Muthukumar T
Schröppel B
Singh P
Weng FL
Parikh CR
Source :
Transplantation [Transplantation] 2020 Jun; Vol. 104 (6), pp. 1272-1279.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Kidneys transplanted from deceased donors with serum creatinine-defined acute kidney injury (AKI) have similar allograft survival as non-AKI kidneys but are discarded at a higher rate. Urine injury biomarkers are sensitive markers of structural kidney damage and may more accurately predict graft outcomes.<br />Methods: In the 2010-2013 multicenter Deceased Donor Study of 2430 kidney transplant recipients from 1298 donors, we assessed the association of donor urine injury biomarkers microalbumin, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, kidney injury molecule-1, IL-18, and liver-type fatty acid binding protein with graft failure (GF) and death-censored GF (dcGF) using Cox proportional hazard models (median follow-up 4 y). We examined if serum creatinine-defined donor AKI modified this association to assess the relationship between subclinical donor AKI (elevated biomarkers without creatinine-defined AKI) and GF. Through chart review of a subcohort (1137 recipients), we determined associations between donor injury biomarkers and a 3-year composite outcome of GF, mortality, or estimated glomerular filtration rate ≤ 20mL/min/1.73m.<br />Results: Risk of GF, dcGF, and 3-year composite outcome did not vary with donor injury biomarker concentrations after adjusting for donor, transplant, and recipient characteristics (adjusted hazard ratio ranged from 0.96 to 1.01 per log-2 increase in biomarker). Subclinical injury in transplanted kidneys without AKI was not associated with GF.<br />Conclusions: AKI measured using injury biomarkers was not associated with posttransplant graft outcomes (at median 4 y posttransplant). When assessing posttransplant graft viability, clinicians can prioritize other donor and recipient factors over donor kidney injury, measured by either serum creatinine or urine injury biomarkers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1534-6080
Volume :
104
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Transplantation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31568213
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/TP.0000000000002948