Temporal changes in the composition of a large multicenter kidney exchange clearinghouse: Do the hard-to-match accumulate?

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Abstract

One criticism of kidney paired donation (KPD) is that easy-to-match candidates leave the registry quickly, thus concentrating the pool with hard-to-match sensitized and blood type O candidates. We studied candidate/donor pairs who registered with the National Kidney Registry (NKR), the largest US KPD clearinghouse, from January 2012-June 2016. There were no changes in age, gender, BMI, race, ABO blood type, or panel-reactive antibody (PRA) of newly registering candidates over time, with consistent registration of hard-to-match candidates (59% type O and 38% PRA ≥97%). However, there was no accumulation of type O candidates over time, presumably due to increasing numbers of nondirected type O donors. Although there was an initial accumulation of candidates with PRA ≥97% (from 33% of the pool in 2012% to 43% in 2014, P =.03), the proportion decreased to 17% by June 2016 (P

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APA

Holscher, C. M., Jackson, K., Thomas, A. G., Haugen, C. E., DiBrito, S. R., Covarrubias, K., … Segev, D. L. (2018). Temporal changes in the composition of a large multicenter kidney exchange clearinghouse: Do the hard-to-match accumulate? American Journal of Transplantation, 18(11), 2791–2797. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajt.15046

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