Long-term renal allograft survival: Have we made significant progress or is it time to rethink our analytic and therapeutic strategies?

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Abstract

Impressive renal allograft survival improvement between 1988 and 1995 has been described using projections of half-lives based on limited actual follow up. We aimed, now with sufficient follow up available to calculate real half-lives. Real half-lives calculated from Kaplan-Meier curves for the overall population as well as subsets of repeat transplants and African Americans recipients were examined. Real half-lives were substantially shorter than projected half-lives. As a whole, half-lives have improved by about 2 years between 1988 and 1995 as compared to the earlier projected 6 years of improvement. The improvement seems to be driven primarily by the improvement in graft survival of re-transplants. First transplants showed a cumulative increase in graft survival of less than 6 months. Projected half-lives are a risky estimation of long-term survival especially when based on short actual follow up. First-transplant survival has only marginally improved during the early years of post transplant follow up while no significant improvement in long-term survival could be detected between 1988 and 1995. Redirection of attention from early endpoints towards the process of long-term graft loss may be necessary to sustain early gains in the long term.

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Meier-Kriesche, H. U., Schold, J. D., & Kaplan, B. (2004). Long-term renal allograft survival: Have we made significant progress or is it time to rethink our analytic and therapeutic strategies? American Journal of Transplantation, 4(8), 1289–1295. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-6143.2004.00515.x

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