Living donor age and kidney transplant outcomes

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Abstract

We assessed the relationship between living donor (LD) age and kidney survival in 1063 adults transplanted between 1980 and 2007. Increasing LD age was associated with lower kidney function (GFR) before and after transplantation and loss of GFR beyond 1 year. Increasing LD age was also associated with low-moderate proteinuria posttransplant (151-1500 mg/day, p < 0.0001). By univariate analysis, reduced graft survival related to lower GFR at 1 year [HR = 0.925 (0.906-0.944), p < 0.0001], proteinuria [HR = 1.481 (1.333-1.646), p < 0.0001] and increasing LD age [HR = 1.271 (1.219-1.326), p = 0.001]. The impact of LD age on graft survival was noted particularly >4 years posttransplant and was modified by recipient age. Thus, compared to a kidney graft that was within 5 years of the recipient age, younger kidneys had a survival advantage [HR = 0.600 (0.380-0.949), p = 0.029] while older kidneys had a survival disadvantage [HR = 2.217 (1.507-3.261), p < 0.0001]. However, this effect was seen only in recipients <50 years old. By multivariate analysis, the relationship between LD age and graft survival was independent of GFR but related to proteinuria. In conclusion, LD age is an important determinant of long-term graft survival, particularly in younger recipients. Older kidneys with reduced survival are identifiable by the development of proteinuria posttransplant. This study shows, in a cohort of 1063 adult living kidney transplant recipients, that increasing living donor age is associated with higher incidence of post-transplant proteinuria and reduced death-censored graft survival, two interrelated variables. © 2011 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.

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APA

Noppakun, K., Cosio, F. G., Dean, P. G., Taler, S. J., Wauters, R., & Grande, J. P. (2011). Living donor age and kidney transplant outcomes. American Journal of Transplantation, 11(6), 1279–1286. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-6143.2011.03552.x

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