Affiliation:
1. Division of Transplant Surgery Department of Surgery University of California Davis Health Sacramento California USA
2. Department of Public Health Sciences School of Medicine University of California, Davis Sacramento California USA
3. University of California Davis School of Medicine Sacramento California USA
4. Division of Transplant Nephrology Department of Medicine University of California Davis Health Sacramento California USA
5. Division of Transplantation & Hepatobiliary Surgery Department of Surgery University of California San Diego Health La Jolla California USA
Abstract
ABSTRACTBackgroundEfforts to address the shortage of donor organs include increasing the use of renal allografts from donors after circulatory death (DCD). While warm ischemia time (WIT) is thought to be an important factor in DCD kidney evaluation, few studies have compared the relationship between WIT and DCD kidney outcomes, and WIT acceptance practices remain variable.MethodsWe conducted a single‐center retrospective review of all adult patients who underwent deceased donor kidney transplantation from 2000 to 2021. We evaluated the impact of varied functional warm ischemia time (fWIT) in controlled DCD donors by comparing donor and recipient characteristics and posttransplant outcomes between high fWIT (>60 min), low fWIT (≤60 min), and kidneys transplanted from donors after brain death (DBD).ResultsTwo thousand eight hundred eleven patients were identified, 638 received low fWIT DCD, 93 received high fWIT DCD, and 2080 received DBD kidneys. There was no significant difference in 5‐year graft survival between the DCD low fWIT, high fWIT, and DBD groups, with 84%, 83%, and 83% of grafts functioning, respectively. Five‐year patient survival was 91% in the low fWIT group, 92% in the high fWIT group, and 90% in the DBD group. An increase in kidney donor risk index (KDRI) (HR 3.37, 95% CI = 2.1–5.7) and high CIT compared to low CIT (HR 2.12, 95% CI = 1.4–3.1) have higher hazard ratios for 1‐year graft failure.ConclusionsIncreased acceptance of kidneys from selected DCD donors with prolonged fWIT may present an opportunity to increase kidney utilization while preserving outcomes. Our group specifically prioritizes the use of kidneys from younger donors, with lower KDPI, and without acute kidney injury, or risk factors for underlying chronic kidney disease.
Funder
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
National Institutes of Health