Alternative Living Kidney Donation Programs Boost Genetically Unrelated Donation

Author:

Poldervaart Rosalie A.1,Laging Mirjam1ORCID,Royaards Tessa1,Kal-van Gestel Judith A.1,van Agteren Madelon1,de Klerk Marry1,Zuidema Willij1,Betjes Michiel G. H.1,Roodnat Joke I.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Erasmus MC, s-Gravendijkwal 230, 3015 CE Rotterdam, Netherlands

Abstract

Donor-recipient ABO and/or HLA incompatibility used to lead to donor decline. Development of alternative transplantation programs enabled transplantation of incompatible couples. How did that influence couple characteristics? Between 2000 and 2014, 1232 living donor transplantations have been performed. In conventional and ABO-incompatible transplantation the willing donor becomes an actual donor for the intended recipient. In kidney-exchange and domino-donation the donor donates indirectly to the intended recipient. The relationship between the donor and intended recipient was studied. There were 935 conventional and 297 alternative program transplantations. There were 66 ABO-incompatible, 68 domino-paired, 62 kidney-exchange, and 104 altruistic donor transplantations. Waiting list recipients (n=101) were excluded as they did not bring a living donor. 1131 couples remained of whom 196 participated in alternative programs.Genetically unrelateddonors (486) were primarily partners.Genetically relateddonors (645) were siblings, parents, children, and others. Compared to genetically related couples, almost three times as many genetically unrelated couples were incompatible and participated in alternative programs (P<0.001). 62% of couples were genetically related in the conventional donation program versus 32% in alternative programs (P<0.001). Patient and graft survival were not significantly different between recipient programs. Alternative donation programs increase the number of transplantations by enabling genetically unrelated donors to donate.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

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