Excellent graft and patient survival after renal transplantation from donors after brain death with acute kidney injury: a case–control study
Background Whether organs from donors after brain death (DBD) with acute kidney injury (AKI) should be accepted for transplantation is still a matter of debate. Methods This was a retrospective, center-based, matched cohort study of 33 renal transplant patients who received a renal allograft from a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International urology and nephrology 2015-12, Vol.47 (12), p.2039-2046 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
Whether organs from donors after brain death (DBD) with acute kidney injury (AKI) should be accepted for transplantation is still a matter of debate.
Methods
This was a retrospective, center-based, matched cohort study of 33 renal transplant patients who received a renal allograft from a DBD with AKI. Sixty-five kidney transplants without donor AKI transplanted directly before and after the index transplantation served as controls.
Results
All AKI donors were classified according to RIFLE criteria: 9.1 % Risk, 54.6 % Injury, and 36.4 % Failure. Mean serum creatinine was 2.41 ± 0.88 mg/dL at procurement and 1.06 ± 0.32 mg/dL on admission. AKI donors had lower 24-h urine production (3.22 ± 1.95 vs. 4.59 ± 2.53 L,
p
= 0.009) and received more frequently noradrenaline (93.9 vs. 72.3 %,
p
= 0.02) and/or adrenaline (15.2 vs. 1.5 %,
p
= 0.02). Recipient and transplant characteristics were similar except a more favorable HLA match in control patients (
p
= 0.01). Hemodialysis posttransplant was more frequently used in AKI recipients (14/33 [42.4 %] vs. 18/65 [27.7 %],
p
= 0.17). While significant elevations in serum creatinine were noted in these patients until 10 days after transplantation, this difference lost statistical significance by day 14. One-year graft survival was very similar when comparing the groups (93.6 % [95 % CI 76.8–98.4 %] vs. 90.3 % [95 % CI 79.6–95.5 %], log rank
p
= 0.58).
Conclusions
Kidneys from AKI donors can be transplanted with excellent intermediate prognosis and should not be discarded. |
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ISSN: | 0301-1623 1573-2584 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11255-015-1127-5 |