Volume 19, Issue 3 pp. 372-376

Negative impact of ‘old-to-old’ donations on success of cadaveric renal transplants

Inbal Weiss-Salz

Inbal Weiss-Salz

 The Department of Health Services Research, Ministry of Health, Israel

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Micha Mandel

Micha Mandel

 The Department of Health Services Research, Ministry of Health, Israel

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Noya Galai

Noya Galai

 The Department of Health Services Research, Ministry of Health, Israel

 Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Baltimore MD, USA

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Geoffrey Boner

Geoffrey Boner

 Department of Nephrology, Rabin Medical Center, Petah-Tikva

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Eytan Mor

Eytan Mor

 Department of Transplantation, Rabin Medical Center, Petah-Tikva

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Richard Nakache

Richard Nakache

 Department of Transplantation, Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel-Aviv, Israel

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Elisheva Simchen

Elisheva Simchen

 The Department of Health Services Research, Ministry of Health, Israel

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the Israeli Transplantation Consortium

the Israeli Transplantation Consortium

The Israeli Transplantation Consortium: Tamar Ashkenazi RN MSc, Geoffrey Boner MD, Ahmed Eid MD, Jonathan Halevi MD, Aaron Hoffman MD, Ron Loewenthal MD PHD, Solly Mizrahi MD, Eytan Mor MD, Richard Nakache MD, Ruth Rahamimov MD, Anat Rotem MsC, Moshe Shabtai MD.

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First published: 22 April 2005
Citations: 5
Prof. Elisheva Simchen, The Department of Health Services Research, Ministry of Health, 29 Rivka St., Jerusalem 91010, Israel.
Tel.: (972) 25681202/1; fax: (972) 25681326;
e-mail: [email protected]/[email protected]/[email protected]

Abstract

Abstract: The effect of ‘old-to-old’ cadaveric renal transplants on operative complications and graft survival was assessed in all 325 patients undergoing solitary cadaveric renal transplantations in Israel during a 3-yr period. Preoperative information and hospital course data were abstracted from the charts. Results were analyzed using Kaplan–Meyer survival curves, univariate and multivariate Cox models. Overall, 62 (19.1%) grafts failed within a year. Failure rate was 46.2% for ‘old-to-old’ transplants compared with 15.5% for all other donor/recipient age combinations (p < 0.0001). ‘Old-to-old’ transplants remained independently associated with graft failure in a multivariate Cox model after controlling the effect of other risk factors. ‘Old-to-old’ transplants were also associated with increased operative complications relative to other age combinations. The decision to use ‘old-to-old’ transplants, even when donors are scarce, is problematic and should be reconsidered.

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