Back to Search Start Over

Sex Differences in Kidney Transplantation: Austria and the United States, 1978-2018

Authors :
Hödlmoser, Sebastian
Gehrig, Teresa
Antlanger, Marlies
Kurnikowski, Amelie
Lewandowski, Michał
Krenn, Simon
Zee, Jarcy
Pecoits-Filho, Roberto
Kramar, Reinhard
Carrero, Juan Jesus
Jager, Kitty J.
Tong, Allison
Port, Friedrich K.
Posch, Martin
Winkelmayer, Wolfgang C.
Schernhammer, Eva
Hecking, Manfred
Ristl, Robin
Medical Informatics
ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis
APH - Aging & Later Life
APH - Quality of Care
APH - Global Health
Source :
Frontiers in Medicine, 8:800933. Frontiers Media S.A., Frontiers in Medicine
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Systematic analyses about sex differences in wait-listing and kidney transplantation after dialysis initiation are scarce. We aimed at identifying sex-specific disparities along the path of kidney disease treatment, comparing two countries with distinctive health care systems, the US and Austria, over time. Methods: We analyzed subjects who initiated dialysis from 1979–2018, in observational cohort studies from the US and Austria. We used Cox regression to model male-to-female cause-specific hazard ratios (csHRs, 95% confidence intervals) for transitions along the consecutive states dialysis initiation, wait-listing, kidney transplantation and death, adjusted for age and stratified by country and decade of dialysis initiation. Results: Among 3,053,206 US and 36,608 Austrian patients starting dialysis, men had higher chances to enter the wait-list, which however decreased over time [male-to-female csHRs for wait-listing, 1978–1987: US 1.94 (1.71, 2.20), AUT 1.61 (1.20, 2.17); 2008–2018: US 1.35 (1.32, 1.38), AUT 1.11 (0.94, 1.32)]. Once wait-listed, the advantage of the men became smaller, but persisted in the US [male-to-female csHR for transplantation after wait-listing, 2008–2018: 1.08 (1.05, 1.11)]. The greatest disparity between men and women occurred in older age groups in both countries [male-to-female csHR for wait-listing after dialysis, adjusted to 75% age quantile, 2008–2018: US 1.83 (1.74, 1.92), AUT 1.48 (1.02, 2.13)]. Male-to-female csHRs for death were close to one, but higher after transplantation than after dialysis. Conclusions: We found evidence for sex disparities in both countries. Historically, men in the US and Austria had 90%, respectively, 60% higher chances of being wait-listed for kidney transplantation, although these gaps decreased over time. Efforts should be continued to render kidney transplantation equally accessible for both sexes, especially for older women.

Details

ISSN :
2296858X
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in medicine
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....158bd9b31e26421c52106f1a420d3763