Characterizing the risk of HLA-incompatible living donor kidney transplantation in older recipients. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Older compatible living donor kidney transplant recipients (CLDKT) have higher mortality and death-censored graft failure compared to younger recipients. These risks may be amplified in older incompatible living donor kidney transplant recipients (ILDKT) who undergo desensitization and intense immunosuppression. In a 25-center cohort of ILDKT recipients transplanted between September 24, 1997 and December 15, 2016, we compared mortality, death-censored graft failure (DCGF), delayed graft function (DGF), acute rejection (AR), and length of stay (LOS) between 234 older (ageā‰„60) and 1172 younger (age 18-59) recipients. To investigate whether the impact of age was different for ILDKT recipients compared to 17,542 CLDKT recipients, we used an interaction term to determine whether the relationship between post-transplant outcomes and transplant type (ILDKT vs. CLDKT) was modified by age. Overall, older recipients had higher mortality (HR: 1.632.072.65, p<0.001), lower DCGF (HR: 0.360.530.77, p=0.001) and AR (OR: 0.390.540.74, p<0.001), and similar DGF (OR: 0.461.032.33, p=0.9) and LOS (IRR: 0.880.981.10, p=0.8) compared to younger recipients. The impact of age on mortality (interaction p=0.052), DCGF (interaction p=0.7), AR interaction p=0.2), DGF (interaction p=0.9), and LOS (interaction p=0.5) was similar in ILDKT and CLDKT recipients. Age alone should not preclude eligibility for ILDKT.

authors

publication date

  • September 23, 2023

Research

keywords

  • Kidney Transplantation

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.ajt.2023.09.010

PubMed ID

  • 37748554