Authors |
Remuzzi
G, Cravedi P, Perna A, Dimitrov BD, Turturro M, Locatelli G, Rigotti P,
Baldan N, Beatini M, Valente U, Scalamogna M, Ruggenenti P; Dual Kidney
Transplant Group
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Abstract |
BACKGROUND:
Long-term survival of kidney grafts from older donors is inferior to that
of grafts from younger donors. We sought to determine whether selecting
older kidneys according to their histologic characteristics before implantation
would positively influence long-term outcome.
METHODS: In a prospective cohort study, we assessed outcomes among 62
patients who received one or two histologically evaluated kidneys from
donors older than 60 years of age. These outcomes were compared with outcomes
among 248 matched recipients of single kidney grafts that had not been
histologically evaluated and were either from donors 60 years of age or
younger (124 positive-reference recipients who, according to available
data, were expected to have an optimal outcome) or from those older than
60 years (124 negative-reference recipients, expected to have a worse
outcome). The primary end point was graft survival.
RESULTS: During a median period of 23 months, 4 recipients (6 percent)
of histologically evaluated kidneys progressed to dialysis, as compared
with 7 positive-reference recipients (6 percent) and 29 negative-reference
recipients (23 percent). Graft survival in recipients of histologically
evaluated kidneys did not differ significantly from that of grafts in
positive-reference recipients but was superior to that of grafts in negative-reference
recipients (hazard ratio for graft failure in the negative-reference recipients
relative to the recipients of histologically evaluated kidneys, 3.68;
95 percent confidence interval, 1.29 to 10.52; P=0.02). The performance
of preimplantation histologic evaluation predicted better survival both
in the whole study group (P=0.02) and among recipients of kidneys from
older donors (P=0.01).
CONCLUSIONS: The long-term survival of single or dual kidney grafts from
donors older than 60 years of age is excellent, provided that the grafts
are evaluated histologically before implantation. This approach may help
to expand the donor-organ pool for kidney transplantation.
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