PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Mortality Prediction after the First Year of Kidney Transplantation: An Observational Study on Two European Cohorts.

  • Marine Lorent,
  • Magali Giral,
  • Manuel Pascual,
  • Michael T Koller,
  • Jürg Steiger,
  • Katy Trébern-Launay,
  • Christophe Legendre,
  • Henri Kreis,
  • Georges Mourad,
  • Valérie Garrigue,
  • Lionel Rostaing,
  • Nassim Kamar,
  • Michèle Kessler,
  • Marc Ladrière,
  • Emmanuel Morelon,
  • Fanny Buron,
  • Dela Golshayan,
  • Yohann Foucher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155278
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. e0155278

Abstract

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After the first year post transplantation, prognostic mortality scores in kidney transplant recipients can be useful for personalizing medical management. We developed a new prognostic score based on 5 parameters and computable at 1-year post transplantation. The outcome was the time between the first anniversary of the transplantation and the patient's death with a functioning graft. Afterwards, we appraised the prognostic capacities of this score by estimating time-dependent Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves from two prospective and multicentric European cohorts: the DIVAT (Données Informatisées et VAlidées en Transplantation) cohort composed of patients transplanted between 2000 and 2012 in 6 French centers; and the STCS (Swiss Transplant Cohort Study) cohort composed of patients transplanted between 2008 and 2012 in 6 Swiss centers. We also compared the results with those of two existing scoring systems: one from Spain (Hernandez et al.) and one from the United States (the Recipient Risk Score, RRS, Baskin-Bey et al.). From the DIVAT validation cohort and for a prognostic time at 10 years, the new prognostic score (AUC = 0.78, 95%CI = [0.69, 0.85]) seemed to present significantly higher prognostic capacities than the scoring system proposed by Hernandez et al. (p = 0.04) and tended to perform better than the initial RRS (p = 0.10). By using the Swiss cohort, the RRS and the the new prognostic score had comparable prognostic capacities at 4 years (AUC = 0.77 and 0.76 respectively, p = 0.31). In addition to the current available scores related to the risk to return in dialysis, we recommend to further study the use of the score we propose or the RRS for a more efficient personalized follow-up of kidney transplant recipients.