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Feasible kidney donation with living marginal donors, including diabetes mellitus

OBJECTIVES: To compare the donor outcomes of living donor kidney transplantation between standard donors (SDs) and marginal donors (MDs) including diabetic patients (MD + DM). METHODS: MDs were defined according to Japanese guideline criteria: (a) age >70‐years, (b) blood pressure ≤130/80 mmHg on...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yoshinaga, Kasumi, Araki, Motoo, Wada, Koichiro, Sekito, Takanori, Watari, Shogo, Maruyama, Yuki, Mitsui, Yosuke, Sadahira, Takuya, Kubota, Risa, Nishimura, Shingo, Edamura, Kohei, Kobayashi, Yasuyuki, Tanabe, Katsuyuki, Takeuchi, Hidemi, Kitagawa, Masashi, Kitamura, Shinji, Wada, Jun, Watanabe, Masami, Watanabe, Toyohiko, Nasu, Yasutomo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8342240/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34102025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/iid3.470
Descripción
Sumario:OBJECTIVES: To compare the donor outcomes of living donor kidney transplantation between standard donors (SDs) and marginal donors (MDs) including diabetic patients (MD + DM). METHODS: MDs were defined according to Japanese guideline criteria: (a) age >70‐years, (b) blood pressure ≤130/80 mmHg on hypertension medicine, (c) body mass index >25 to ≤32 kg/m(2), (d) 24‐h creatinine clearance ≥70 to <80 ml/min/1.73 m(2), and (e) hemoglobin A1c > 6.2 or ≤6.5 with oral diabetic medicine. Fifty‐three of 114 donors were MDs. We compared donor kidney functions until 60 months postoperatively. RESULTS: No kidney function parameters were different between SDs and MDs. When comparing SD and MD + DM, MD + DM had a lower postoperative eGFR (48 vs. 41 (1 (month), p = .02), 49 vs. 40 (12, p < .01), 48 vs. 42 (24, p = .04), 47 vs. 38 (36, p = .01)) and the percentage of residual eGFR (SD vs. MD + DM: 63 vs. 57 (1 (month), p < .01), 63 vs. 57 (2, p < .01), 64 vs. 56 (12, p < .01), 63 vs. 57 (24, p < .01), 63 vs. 52 (36, p = .02)). However, when MD with a single risk factor of DM was compared to SD, the difference disappeared. Nine out of 12 (75%) MD + DM had ≥2 risk factors. CONCLUSIONS: Although long‐term observation of donor kidney function is necessary, careful MD + DM selection had the potential to expand the donor pool.