Reproducibility of Deceased Donor Kidney Procurement Biopsies

Author:

Husain S. AliORCID,King Kristen L.ORCID,Batal Ibrahim,Dube Geoffrey K.,Hall Isaac E.ORCID,Brennan Corey,Stokes M. Barry,Crew R. John,Carpenter Dustin,Alvarado Verduzco Hector,Rosen Raphael,Coley Shana,Campenot Eric,Santoriello Dominick,Perotte Adler,Natarajan KarthikORCID,D’Agati Vivette D.,Cohen David J.,Ratner Lloyd E.,Markowitz Glen,Mohan SumitORCID

Abstract

Background and objectivesUnfavorable histology on procurement biopsies is the most common reason for deceased donor kidney discard. We sought to assess the reproducibility of procurement biopsy findings.Design, setting, participants, & measurementsWe compiled a continuous cohort of deceased donor kidneys transplanted at our institution from 1/1/2006 to 12/31/2016 that had at least one procurement biopsy performed, and excluded cases with missing biopsy reports and those used in multiorgan transplants. Suboptimal histology was defined as the presence of advanced sclerosis in greater than or equal to one biopsy compartment (glomeruli, tubules/interstitium, vessels). We calculatedκcoefficients to assess agreement in optimal versus suboptimal classification between sequential biopsy reports for kidneys that underwent multiple procurement biopsies and used time-to-event analysis to evaluate the association between first versus second biopsies and patient and allograft survival.ResultsOf the 1011 kidneys included in our cohort, 606 (60%) had multiple procurement biopsies; 98% had first biopsy performed at another organ procurement organization and their second biopsy performed locally. Categorical agreement was highest for vascular disease (κ=0.17) followed by interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy (κ=0.12) and glomerulosclerosis (κ=0.12). Overall histologic agreement (optimal versus suboptimal) wasκ=0.15. First biopsy histology had no association with allograft survival in unadjusted or adjusted analyses. However, second biopsy optimal histology was associated with a higher probability of death-censored allograft survival, even after adjusting for donor and recipient factors (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.50; 95% confidence interval, 0.34 to 0.75;P=0.001).ConclusionsDeceased donor kidneys that underwent multiple procurement biopsies often displayed substantial differences in histologic categorization in sequential biopsies, and there was no association between first biopsy findings and post-transplant outcomes.

Funder

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

National Kidney Foundation

American Society of Transplantation

National Institutes of Health

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disorders

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Epidemiology

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