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. 2015 Mar;87(3):584-92.
doi: 10.1038/ki.2014.345. Epub 2014 Oct 22.

Racial and ethnic disparities in pediatric renal allograft survival in the United States

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Racial and ethnic disparities in pediatric renal allograft survival in the United States

Rachel E Patzer et al. Kidney Int. 2015 Mar.

Abstract

This study was undertaken to describe the association of patient race/ethnicity and renal allograft survival among the national cohort of pediatric renal allograft recipients. Additionally, we determined whether racial and ethnic differences in graft survival exist among individuals living in low- or high-poverty neighborhoods and those with private or public insurance. Among 6216 incident, pediatric end-stage renal disease patients in the United States Renal Data System (kidney transplant from 2000 through September, 2011), 14.4% experienced graft failure, with a median follow-up time of 4.5 years. After controlling for multiple covariates, black race, but not Hispanic ethnicity, was significantly associated with a higher rate of graft failure for both deceased and living donor transplant recipients. Disparities were particularly stark by 5 years post transplant, when black living donor transplant recipients experienced only 63.0% graft survival compared with 82.8 and 80.8% for Hispanics and whites, respectively. These disparities persisted among high- and low-poverty neighborhoods and among both privately and publicly insured patients. Notably profound declines in both deceased and living donor graft survival rates for black, compared with white and Hispanic, children preceded the 3-year mark when transplant Medicare eligibility ends. Further research is needed to identify the unique barriers to long-term graft success among black pediatric transplant recipients.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosure

The authors of this manuscript have no competing financial interests to disclose.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Kaplan-Meier Analysis of Time to Overall Graft Failure by Race/Ethnicity among Deceased Donor Transplant Recipients (Panel A) and Living Donor Transplant Recipients (Panel B).
Figure 1
Figure 1
Kaplan-Meier Analysis of Time to Overall Graft Failure by Race/Ethnicity among Deceased Donor Transplant Recipients (Panel A) and Living Donor Transplant Recipients (Panel B).

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References

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