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Renal Transplantation
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Half of Kidney Transplant Candidates Who Are Older than 60 Years Now Placed on the Waiting List Will Die before Receiving a Deceased-Donor Transplant

Jesse Schold, Titte R. Srinivas, Ashwini R. Sehgal and Herwig-Ulf Meier-Kriesche
CJASN July 2009, 4 (7) 1239-1245; DOI: https://doi.org/10.2215/CJN.01280209
Jesse Schold
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Titte R. Srinivas
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Ashwini R. Sehgal
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Herwig-Ulf Meier-Kriesche
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Abstract

Background and objectives: Waiting times to deceased-donor transplantation (DDTx) have significantly increased in the past decade. This trend particularly affects older candidates given a high mortality rate on dialysis.

Design, setting, participants, & measurements: We conducted a retrospective analysis from the national Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients database that included 54,669 candidates who were older than 60 yr and listed in the United States for a solitary kidney transplant from 1995 through 2007. Using survival models, we estimated time to DDTx and mortality after candidate listing with and without patients initially listed as temporarily inactive (status 7).

Results: Almost half (46%) of candidates who were older than 60 yr and listed in 2006 through 2007 are projected to die before receiving a DDTx. This proportion varied by individual characteristics: Diabetes (61%), age ≥70 yr (52%), black (62%), blood types O (60%) and B (71%), highly sensitized (68%), and on dialysis at listing (53%). Marked variation also existed by United Network for Organ Sharing region (6 to 81%). The overall projected proportion was reduced to 35% excluding patients who initially were listed as status 7.

Conclusions: These data highlight the prominent and growing challenge facing the field of kidney transplantation. Older candidates are now at significant risk for not surviving the interval in which a deceased-donor transplant would become available. Importantly, this risk is variable within this population, and specific information should be disseminated to patients and caregivers to facilitate informed decision-making and potential incentives to seek living donors.

  • Received February 20, 2009.
  • Accepted April 28, 2009.
  • Copyright © 2009 by the American Society of Nephrology
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Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
Vol. 4, Issue 7
July 2009
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Half of Kidney Transplant Candidates Who Are Older than 60 Years Now Placed on the Waiting List Will Die before Receiving a Deceased-Donor Transplant
Jesse Schold, Titte R. Srinivas, Ashwini R. Sehgal, Herwig-Ulf Meier-Kriesche
CJASN Jul 2009, 4 (7) 1239-1245; DOI: 10.2215/CJN.01280209

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Half of Kidney Transplant Candidates Who Are Older than 60 Years Now Placed on the Waiting List Will Die before Receiving a Deceased-Donor Transplant
Jesse Schold, Titte R. Srinivas, Ashwini R. Sehgal, Herwig-Ulf Meier-Kriesche
CJASN Jul 2009, 4 (7) 1239-1245; DOI: 10.2215/CJN.01280209
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More in this TOC Section

  • Proteins in Preservation Fluid as Predictors of Delayed Graft Function in Kidneys from Donors after Circulatory Death
  • Donor-Recipient Weight and Sex Mismatch and the Risk of Graft Loss in Renal Transplantation
  • A Case-Based Analysis of Whether Living Related Donors Listed for Transplant Share ESRD Causes with Their Recipients
Show more Renal Transplantation

Cited By...

  • Assessment of the Utility of Kidney Histology as a Basis for Discarding Organs in the United States: A Comparison of International Transplant Practices and Outcomes
  • Multicenter Study to Transplant Hepatitis C-Infected Kidneys (MYTHIC): An Open-Label Study of Combined Glecaprevir and Pibrentasvir to Treat Recipients of Transplanted Kidneys from Deceased Donors with Hepatitis C Virus Infection
  • Utilization and Outcomes of Single and Dual Kidney Transplants from Older Deceased Donors in the United Kingdom
  • Global Dialysis Perspective: Japan
  • A Scoping Review for Strategies to Increase Living Kidney Donation
  • Survival Benefit of Transplantation with a Deceased Diabetic Donor Kidney Compared with Remaining on the Waitlist
  • New Solutions to Reduce Discard of Kidneys Donated for Transplantation
  • Comorbidity Burden and Perioperative Complications for Living Kidney Donors in the United States
  • Initiating and Completing the Kidney Transplant Evaluation Process: The Red Queen's Race
  • Living Kidney Donors Ages 70 and Older: Recipient and Donor Outcomes
  • Better Off Living--The Ethics of the New UNOS Proposal for Allocating Kidneys for Transplantation
  • Racial Ethnic Differences in Rates and Determinants of Deceased Donor Kidney Transplantation
  • Barriers to Living Donor Kidney Transplantation among Black or Older Transplant Candidates
  • Kidney Transplants for the Elderly: Hope or Hype?
  • Access to Kidney Transplantation among the Elderly in the United States: A Glass Half Full, not Half Empty
  • An Emerging Population: Kidney Transplant Candidates Who Are Placed on the Waiting List after Liver, Heart, and Lung Transplantation
  • Renal Donation after Cardiac Death
  • Is Kidney Transplantation for Everyone? The Example of the Older Dialysis Patient
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