Critical Factors Associated With Missing Follow-Up Data for Living Kidney Donors in the United States
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Follow-up care for living kidney donors is an important responsibility of the transplant community. Prior reports indicate incomplete donor follow-up information, which may reflect both donor and transplant center factors. New UNOS regulations require reporting of donor follow-up information by centers for 2 years. We utilized national SRTR data to evaluate donor and center-level factors associated with completed follow-up for donors 2008-2012 (n = 30 026) using multivariable hierarchical logistic models. We compared center follow-up compliance based on current UNOS standards using adjusted and unadjusted models. Complete follow-up at 6, 12, and 24 months was 67%, 60%, and 50% for clinical and 51%, 40%, and 30% for laboratory data, respectively, but have improved over time. Donor risk factors for missing laboratory data included younger age 18-34 (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 2.03, 1.58-2.60), black race (AOR = 1.17, 1.05-1.30), lack of insurance (AOR = 1.25, 1.15-1.36), lower educational attainment (AOR = 1.19, 1.06-1.34), >500 miles to center (AOR = 1.78, 1.60-1.98), and centers performing >40 living donor transplants/year (AOR = 2.20, 1.21-3.98). Risk-adjustment moderately shifted classification of center compliance with UNOS standards. There is substantial missing donor follow-up with marked variation by donor characteristics and centers. Although follow-up has improved over time, targeted efforts are needed for donors with selected characteristics and at centers with higher living donor volume. Adding adjustment for donor factors to policies regulating follow-up may function to provide more balanced evaluation of center efforts.
Hori S, Tomizawa M, Inoue K, Yoneda T, Nakahama T, Onishi K In Vivo. 2024; 38(4):1900-1910.
PMID: 38936934 PMC: 11215566. DOI: 10.21873/invivo.13645.
Yu M, King K, Maclay L, Ali Husain S, Schold J, Mohan S Am J Transplant. 2024; 24(10):1828-1836.
PMID: 38636806 PMC: 11439581. DOI: 10.1016/j.ajt.2024.04.006.
Dhalla A, Lloyd A, Lentine K, Garg A, Quinn R, Ravani P Can J Kidney Health Dis. 2023; 10:20543581231158067.
PMID: 36875057 PMC: 9983079. DOI: 10.1177/20543581231158067.
Telemedicine services for living kidney donation: A US survey of multidisciplinary providers.
Al Ammary F, Motter J, Sung H, Lentine K, Sharfuddin A, Kumar V Am J Transplant. 2022; 22(8):2041-2051.
PMID: 35575439 PMC: 9543040. DOI: 10.1111/ajt.17093.
Living kidney donation in a developing country.
Dayal C, Davies M, Diana N, Meyers A PLoS One. 2022; 17(5):e0268183.
PMID: 35536829 PMC: 9089923. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0268183.