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Higher-risk
Kidneys may help solve organ shortage facing
older adults
Newswise — New research
from Wake Forest University Baptist Medical
Center suggests that age alone shouldn’t be
a barrier to receiving a kidney transplant –
and that using donated kidneys that would
once have been discarded may help alleviate
the burgeoning organ shortage among older
adults.
“In the recent past,
chronological age has been a considered a
barrier for both organ donation and
transplantation,” said Phillip Moore, M.D.,
lead author. “Our experience suggests that
by transplanting organs that are considered
higher-risk into carefully selected elderly
patients, waiting times can be reduced and
survival is similar, compared to
standard-organ transplants.”
The research, which
involved 356 kidney transplants over a
59-month period, is reported in the journal
Surgery.
Because of the aging
population, there is an increasing need for
kidney transplants among older adults. While
the number of patients younger than 50 added
to the waiting list for kidney transplants
has remained constant during the last
decade, the number of patients who are 65 or
older has tripled. More than half of the
people on the current active list are over
age 50.
“The crisis in organ
supply challenges the transplant community
to maximize the use of organs from all
consenting donors,” said Moore, a surgery
resident.
In 2002, the United
Network for Organ Sharing instituted a new
policy to make better use of higher-risk
organs that were once considered unsuitable
for transplantation. These organs from
“expanded criteria” donors (ECD) include
kidneys from deceased donors over age 60
years or those over age 50 with health
conditions such as high blood pressure,
stroke or elevated levels of a protein
called creatinine. Levels of creatinine,
which is produced by muscle, are used to
determine kidney function.
“Controversy exists
regarding the optimal approach to the
elderly donor and recipient,” said Moore.
“Ethical concerns have been expressed that
providing elderly patients who have
end-state renal disease with scarce kidneys
from deceased donors may not represent a
worthwhile investment.”
Some studies have shown
that being older is associated with a higher
risk of the transplant failing; other
studies have shown that survival of the
transplanted organ is similar in all age
groups. Moore’s study reviewed 356
transplants over almost six years with
respect to recipient age.
Almost one-third of
patients were over age 60 and more half of
them (54 percent) received ECD kidneys.
There were 26 recipients over age 70 and the
oldest recipient was 81 years old.
Patient and organ
survival rates were similar regardless of
patient age – and whether they received an
ECD or a standard-criteria donor organ. In
addition, the mean waiting time for patients
over 60 receiving ECD kidneys was 18 months,
compared to 25 months for those receiving
standard criteria donor kidneys.
With a mean follow-up
of 27 months, patient survival was 91
percent among patients older than 60 years
and 95 percent among those younger than 60
years. Survival of the transplanted organ
was similar for all age groups: 82 percent
in patients over age 60, 83 percent in
patients between 40 and 59 years old, and 87
percent in patients 19 to 39 years old.
Survival rates were
also similar between patients receiving ECD
kidneys and those receiving standard
kidneys. Patient survival rates were 93
percent and 89 percent respectively, and
kidney survival rates were 82 percent and 81
percent. In the subgroup of recipients over
age 70, patient and graft survival rates
were both 100.
“By directing ECD
kidneys to appropriate elderly patients,
waiting times can be reduced and survival is
similar compared to standard kidneys in the
elderly,” said Moore. “At our center, no
specific upper age limit is an absolute
barrier to kidney transplantation.”
Kidney transplantation
is a preferred treatment for end-stage renal
failure, which increases disproportionately
with older age. Transplantation is
associated with an improved life expectancy
and better quality of life and is
cost-effective for patients and payers.
“Transplantation
between older donors and recipients has
resulted in a doubling of the annual
transplant activity at our center in the
past five years,” said Moore.
Co-researchers were
Alan Farney, M.D., Ph.D., Erica Hartmann,
M.D., Jeffrey Rogers, M.D., William Doares,
PharmD, Michael Gautreaux, Ph.D., Samy
Iskandar, MBBCh., Ph.D., Gloria Hairston,
B.S., Patricia Adams, M.D. and Robert
Stratta, M.D.
Wake Forest University
Baptist Medical Center is an academic health
system comprised of North Carolina Baptist
Hospital and Wake Forest University Health
Sciences, which operates the university’s
School of Medicine. U.S. News & World Report
ranks Wake Forest University School of
Medicine 18th in family medicine, 20th in
geriatrics, 25th in primary care and 41st in
research among the nation's medical schools.
It ranks 35th in research funding by the
National Institutes of Health. Almost 150
members of the medical school faculty are
listed in Best Doctors in America.
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