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. 2003 Feb 15;75(3):361-7.
doi: 10.1097/01.TP.0000044171.97375.61.

Multivariate analysis of donor risk factors for graft survival in kidney transplantation

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Multivariate analysis of donor risk factors for graft survival in kidney transplantation

Fabienne Pessione et al. Transplantation. .

Abstract

Background: The results of the transplantation of marginal donor kidneys remain controversial. This study aimed to investigate the impact of donor risk factors as predictors of kidney-graft outcome.

Methods: Allograft failure risk factors were studied in 7,209 cadaveric kidney-transplant recipients reporting to the Etablissement français des Greffes (EfG) from 1996 to 2000, of which 544 (7.6%) were from donors aged over 60. Both univariate and multivariate analysis were used to assess the effect of donor risk factors and were stratified according to recipient age.

Results: Overall graft survival was 91.1% (95% confidence interval [CI] 90.5-91.8) at 1 year, 88.6% (95% CI 87.8-89.4) at 2 years, and 85.6% (95% CI 84.6-86.6) at 3 years posttransplant. Univariate analysis of risk factors showed a significant reduction of graft survival in recipients transplanted with kidneys coming from donors older than 60 years, donors with a history of hypertension, a cerebrovascular cause of death, and a preharvesting serum creatinine greater than 150 micromol/L. Multivariate analysis revealed significantly higher failure rate associated with cerebrovascular cause of death (RR=1.2, P=0.02), history of hypertension (RR=1.2, P=0.04), and elevated serum creatinine (RR=1.3, P=0.03), whereas donor age greater than 60 years was not found as an independent risk factor.

Conclusions: Our results suggest that cerebrovascular cause of death, history of hypertension, and elevated creatinine are significant independent donor risk factors for graft survival, whereas donor age is a statistically significant, but dependent, risk factor. This result is important for the design of allocation and transplantation strategies for kidneys procured in elderly donors.

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Comment in

  • Why study kidney transplant risk factors?
    Matas AJ, Humar A. Matas AJ, et al. Transplantation. 2003 Feb 15;75(3):266-7. doi: 10.1097/01.tp.0000045490.07670.42. Transplantation. 2003. PMID: 12602408 Review. No abstract available.

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