IntroductionWhile the benefits of deceased donor kidney transplant versus dialysis are clear, the impact of graft longevity remains unclear.Research QuestionsThis study assessed survival between patients with failed grafts and patients who remained on dialysis alone.DesignUtilizing the Organ Procurement and Transplant Network database, adults on dialysis listed for deceased donor kidney transplant between 1/2005 and 12/2017 were identified (n = 265 280; n = 129 062 [48.7%] transplant; n = 136 218 [51.3%] dialysis alone, not transplanted). A multivariable Cox proportional hazards model incorporating confounding covariates and utilizing transplant status (dialysis alone, functioning graft, failed graft) as a time-varying covariate was constructed. Representative patients were then fit to this model to assess survival probability.ResultsPatients who underwent transplant experienced a 65% reduction in mortality compared to those remaining on dialysis. However, graft failure (n = 19 389, 15.0% of transplants) was associated with a 47% increase in hazard rate compared to dialysis. When an average-risk patient was fit to this model, with transplant 4 years after dialysis initiation, a graft required longevity of 3 years to convey a survival probability benefit at 5 years postoperatively (9 years from waitlisting, 35%) over remaining on dialysis through the same time point (9 years from waitlisting, 32%).ConclusionsThese results argue for scrutiny of anticipated graft longevity and its expected impact on individual outcomes and advocate for 3-year graft survival as a critical clinical measure for transplant programs.
The Impact of Failed Deceased Donor Kidney Graft Longevity on Mortality.
TL;DR
IntroductionWhile the benefits of deceased donor kidney transplant versus dialysis are clear, the impact of graft longevity remains unclear.Research QuestionsThis study assessed survival between patients with failed grafts and patients who remained on dialysis alone.DesignUtilizing the Organ Procurement and Transplant Network database, adults on dialysis listed for deceased donor kidney transplant between 1/2005 and 12/2017 were identified (n = 265 280; n = 129 062 [48.7%] transplant; n = 136 21
Credibility Assessment
Preliminary — 38/100
Study Design
Rigor of the research methodology
5/20
Sample Size
Whether the study was sufficiently powered
7/20
Peer Review
Review status and journal reputation
10/20
Replication
Has this finding been independently reproduced?
6/20
Transparency
Funding disclosure and data availability
10/20
Overall
Sum of all five dimensions
38/100
0 Comments
Log in to join the discussion.