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Pretransplant Cognitive Function and Kidney Transplant Outcomes: A Prospective Cohort Study

Overview
Journal Kidney Med
Specialty Nephrology
Date 2024 Aug 29
PMID 39206246
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Background & Hypothesis: Cognitive impairment is common in patients being evaluated for a kidney transplant (KT). The association between pretransplant cognitive function and posttransplant outcomes is unclear.

Study Design: We performed a prospective cohort study to assess the association between pretransplant cognitive function and clinically relevant posttransplant outcomes.

Setting And Population: In this single center study, participants from the transplant clinic were evaluated during their pretransplant clinic visits and followed prospectively.

Outcomes: Our primary outcome measure was allograft function. Secondary outcomes were length of hospitalization for KT, hospital readmission within 30 and 90 days, graft loss, graft rejection within 90 days and 1 year, and mortality.

Analytic Approach: We measured cognitive function with the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) test. We assessed the association of pretransplant MoCA score with posttransplant outcomes; we used linear mixed effects models to assess the association with the change in estimated glomerular filtration rate, Poisson regression for length of hospitalization, Cox proportional hazard model for graft loss and mortality, and a logistic regression model for readmission and rejection.

Results: We followed 501 participants for 2.7 ± 1.5 years. The mean age of the patients was 53 ± 14 years and the mean pretransplant MoCA score was 25 ± 3. Lower pretransplant MoCA scores did not adversely affect the primary outcome of allograft function or the secondary outcomes. Although higher MoCA scores predicted a higher decline in graft function (β = -0.28, 95% CI: -0.55 to -0.01,  = 0.04), the effect was small and not clinically significant. Older age was associated with longer hospitalization, lower likelihood of rejection, and higher mortality. Deceased donor KT (vs living donor KT) was associated with longer hospitalization but better graft function. Longer time receiving dialysis before KT was associated with longer hospitalization. A history of diabetes mellitus was associated with higher mortality.

Limitations: Single center study limiting generalizability.

Conclusions: Pretransplant MoCA scores were not associated with the primary outcome of allograft function or the secondary outcomes.

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