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Effect of Donor Age and Parent-to-child Transplant on Living-related Donor Kidney Transplantation: a Single Center's Experience of 236 Cases

Overview
Journal Ren Fail
Publisher Informa Healthcare
Date 2015 Jun 5
PMID 26042341
Citations 2
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Abstract

To study the impact of parent-to-child transplant and older donor age on recipients' post-transplant creatinine levels, a total of 236 patients who received living donor kidney transplantation were evaluated for kidney viability based on creatinine (Cr) level. Of the 236 pairings, 113 (48%) were parent-to-child followed by sibling transplants (66, 30%). Recipient Cr levels were significantly higher at 6 months and 3 years post-transplant in the parent-to-child transplants compared to other donor-recipient relationships. In addition, donor age (average age: 44.1 ± 11.5; range: 19-66) contributed to higher recipient post-transplant Cr levels (p < 0.01). Pre-transplant donor and recipient Cr levels tended to result in higher post-transplant Cr levels in recipients (p < 0.05). Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that the presence of both parent-to-child transplant and older donor significantly increased the risk of elevated post-transplant Cr levels in recipients with an estimated odds ratios ranging from 3.46 (95% CI: 1.71-6.98) at 6 months to 8.04 (3.14-20.56) at 3 years post-transplant. Donor age significantly affected transplant survival as measured by higher recipient post-transplant Cr levels. In addition, parent-to-child transplant pairings, along with older donor age, significantly increased the risk of elevated post-transplant Cr levels in recipients.

Citing Articles

Impact of Donor-Recipient Relationship on Long-Term Outcomes in Living-Related Donor Kidney Transplantation.

Chen L, Li H, Zhang T, Dong H, Bai H Ann Transplant. 2024; 29:e945065.

PMID: 39375910 PMC: 11472667. DOI: 10.12659/AOT.945065.


Is ABO Incompatible Living Donor Kidney Transplantation in Children a Better Option than the Use of Optimal Grafts From Deceased Donors? A Plea for Better Prioritization of Deceased Kidney Grafts for Children.

Boyer O, Pape L Transpl Int. 2023; 36:11911.

PMID: 37789913 PMC: 10542672. DOI: 10.3389/ti.2023.11911.