Kidney International Reports (Jan 2017)

Transplantation of Renal Allografts From Organ Donors Reactive for HCV Antibodies to HCV-Negative Recipients: Safety and Clinical Outcome

  • Knut Michael Nowak,
  • Oliver Witzke,
  • Georgios C. Sotiropoulos,
  • Tamas Benkö,
  • Melanie Fiedler,
  • Jörg Timm,
  • Andreas Kribben,
  • Benjamin Wilde,
  • Fuat Saner,
  • Andreas Paul,
  • Jürgen Treckmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ekir.2016.09.058
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 53 – 59

Abstract

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Because of the shortage of available organs for renal transplantation, strategies enabling the safe use of organs from donors with potential chronic infections such as hepatitis C are necessary. The aim of this study was to analyze the outcome of renal transplant donation from hepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive donors. Methods: Between September 2002 and May 2007, 51 kidneys (34 donors) reactive for HCV antibodies were further evaluated. Six kidneys (5 donors) were transplanted to 6 recipients with known chronic HCV infection. The remaining 29 donors underwent extended virological testing. Nine donors were HCV RNA positive and thus not suitable for HCV-negative patients. Twenty donors (21 kidneys) did not have detectable HCV RNA copies and were transplanted into 21 HCV-negative recipients. Clinical outcomes focusing on safety, allograft function, and de novo HCV infection in the recipient were collected. Results: There were no de novo HCV infections detected in recipients who were HCV negative before transplantation. The extended virological donor screening did not have an impact on median cold ischemia time. Five-year graft survival was 75%. Discussion: Organs from anti-HCV-reactive, nonviremic donors can be transplanted safely to HCV-negative recipients.

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