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Occurrence of Increased Kidney Transplant
Listings in Patients with prior Non-Kidney
Transplants
Newswise, September 2010 — Individuals who
received a non-kidney organ transplant in
the past may be more likely to be listed for
a kidney transplant prior to initiation of
dialysis (pre-emptive listing) than other
candidates, according to a study appearing
in an upcoming issue of the Clinical
Journal of the American Society Nephrology (CJASN).
The results indicate that the growth in the
numbers of this group of kidney transplant
candidates adds to the list of organ
allocation challenges.
Kidney failure may accompany or complicate
transplantation of the liver, heart, or
lung. Because increasing numbers of
individuals are receiving non-kidney
transplants, researchers have wondered
whether more of such patients are being
listed for kidney transplants.
Titte Srinivas, MD (Cleveland Clinic) and
his colleagues examined data from 1995 to
2008 from the national SRTR (Scientific
Registry of Renal Transplant Recipients),
and found a total of 4904 individuals who
had had a prior organ transplant were
waitlisted to receive a kidney transplant
during this time period.
Prior to 1995, less than 1% of people who
had received other organ transplants were
placed on kidney transplant waiting lists;
in 2008, 3.3% of those who had received
other organ transplants were waitlisted for
kidney transplants.
The researchers found among individuals who
had a prior organ transplant, 38% were
waitlisted to receive a kidney transplant
before initiating dialysis, compared with
21% of individuals who had not received a
prior organ transplant. “Pre-emptive
transplantation of a kidney (prior to
dialysis) and listing for such is the
preferred modality of management of
end-stage kidney disease.
This modality is especially relevant in the
non-renal transplant population as they have
much higher waitlist mortality than those
with prior renal transplants. However, the
more frequent pre-emptive transplants
occurring in these patients may be a product
of these patients and their caregivers being
more familiar with navigating transplant
procedures, and thus receiving superior
pre-transplant care” said Dr. Srinivas. The
impact of how physician advocacy plays a
role needs investigation as well.
Compared with patients on kidney transplant
waiting lists who had received a prior
kidney transplant, waitlisted patients who
had received a prior heart, liver, or lung
transplant had a shorter lifespan. The
authors recommend selectively targeting such
patients for extended criteria donor
kidneys, shortening wait time, considering
living donor kidney transplants more often
in these cases. “According to the authors,
researchers should design studies that
address practice and policy to include
critical factors related to prior organ
transplant and to ensure equitable
allocation of resources and access to best
practices among all kidney transplant
candidates.
Study co-authors include Brian Stephany, MD,
Marie Budev, DO, David Mason, MD, Charles
Miller, MD, Randall Starling, MD, David
Goldfarb, MD, Emilio Poggio, MD, Stuart
Flechner, MD, and Jesse Schold, PhD
(Cleveland Clinic).
Disclosures: The authors reported no
financial disclosures.
The article, entitled “An Emerging
Population: Kidney Transplant Candidates Who
Are Placed on the Waiting List after Liver,
Heart, and Lung Transplantation,” will
appear online at http://cjasn.asnjournals.org/ on
September 2, 2010, doi 10.2215/CJN.02950410.
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