Expanded Criteria Donor With Severe Acute Kidney Injury: Worth to Use?

Background: Expanded criteria donors (ECDs) may present with acute kidney injury (AKI). Many transplantation centers refuse to use these kidneys because of concerns about poor transplant outcomes, resulting in a high discard rate. However, long-term results of ECDs with AKI (ECDs + AKI) have not bee...

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Main Author: Thotsiri S.
Other Authors: Mahidol University
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Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/85489
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spelling th-mahidol.854892023-06-19T00:42:48Z Expanded Criteria Donor With Severe Acute Kidney Injury: Worth to Use? Thotsiri S. Mahidol University Medicine Background: Expanded criteria donors (ECDs) may present with acute kidney injury (AKI). Many transplantation centers refuse to use these kidneys because of concerns about poor transplant outcomes, resulting in a high discard rate. However, long-term results of ECDs with AKI (ECDs + AKI) have not been extensively studied. Methods: We retrospectively compared outcomes of ECDs with ECDs + AKI. Primary outcome was 5-year allograft and patient survival rate. Secondary outcomes were allograft function, rates of delayed graft function, and allograft rejection. Results: Of 743 deceased donor kidney transplant recipients, 95 ECD cases were included in this study. There were 38 patients (40%) with ECDs and 57 patients (60%) with ECDs + AKI. Mean donor creatinine was progressively higher with severity of AKI. Five-year graft and patient survival were comparable between ECDs and ECDs + AKI (80.6% vs 81.1%, P =.95 and 91.7% vs 88.7%, P =.73). Mean (SD) allograft estimated glomerular filtration rate was 36.7 (14.5) vs 40.6 (22.7) mL/min/1.73 m2 with P =.61, respectively. Multivariate analysis showed factors associated graft loss were delayed graft function (P =.01) and donor-recipient age difference ≥10 years (P =.038), not AKI status. Conclusions: Kidney transplant from ECDs + AKI has comparable allograft survival with ECDs without AKI. Use of ECDs + AKI is worthwhile and kidneys from ECDs + AKI should not be discarded. Recipient selection and perioperative care are important to optimize the use of scarce resource. 2023-06-18T17:42:48Z 2023-06-18T17:42:48Z 2022-10-01 Article Transplantation Proceedings Vol.54 No.8 (2022) , 2097-2102 10.1016/j.transproceed.2022.08.036 18732623 00411345 36195498 2-s2.0-85139070896 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/85489 SCOPUS
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Thotsiri S.
Expanded Criteria Donor With Severe Acute Kidney Injury: Worth to Use?
description Background: Expanded criteria donors (ECDs) may present with acute kidney injury (AKI). Many transplantation centers refuse to use these kidneys because of concerns about poor transplant outcomes, resulting in a high discard rate. However, long-term results of ECDs with AKI (ECDs + AKI) have not been extensively studied. Methods: We retrospectively compared outcomes of ECDs with ECDs + AKI. Primary outcome was 5-year allograft and patient survival rate. Secondary outcomes were allograft function, rates of delayed graft function, and allograft rejection. Results: Of 743 deceased donor kidney transplant recipients, 95 ECD cases were included in this study. There were 38 patients (40%) with ECDs and 57 patients (60%) with ECDs + AKI. Mean donor creatinine was progressively higher with severity of AKI. Five-year graft and patient survival were comparable between ECDs and ECDs + AKI (80.6% vs 81.1%, P =.95 and 91.7% vs 88.7%, P =.73). Mean (SD) allograft estimated glomerular filtration rate was 36.7 (14.5) vs 40.6 (22.7) mL/min/1.73 m2 with P =.61, respectively. Multivariate analysis showed factors associated graft loss were delayed graft function (P =.01) and donor-recipient age difference ≥10 years (P =.038), not AKI status. Conclusions: Kidney transplant from ECDs + AKI has comparable allograft survival with ECDs without AKI. Use of ECDs + AKI is worthwhile and kidneys from ECDs + AKI should not be discarded. Recipient selection and perioperative care are important to optimize the use of scarce resource.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
Thotsiri S.
format Article
author Thotsiri S.
author_sort Thotsiri S.
title Expanded Criteria Donor With Severe Acute Kidney Injury: Worth to Use?
title_short Expanded Criteria Donor With Severe Acute Kidney Injury: Worth to Use?
title_full Expanded Criteria Donor With Severe Acute Kidney Injury: Worth to Use?
title_fullStr Expanded Criteria Donor With Severe Acute Kidney Injury: Worth to Use?
title_full_unstemmed Expanded Criteria Donor With Severe Acute Kidney Injury: Worth to Use?
title_sort expanded criteria donor with severe acute kidney injury: worth to use?
publishDate 2023
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/85489
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