Transplant International (Jun 2024)

Effect of Donor Cigarette Smoking in Kidney Transplantation: Re-Evaluation of Long-Term Outcomes

  • Felix Becker,
  • Nicola Sariye Pollmann,
  • Ricarda Funke-Kaiser,
  • Dennis Görlich,
  • Shadi Katou,
  • Haluk Morgül,
  • Felicia Kneifel,
  • Stefan Reuter,
  • Andreas Pascher,
  • Philipp Houben

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/ti.2024.12955
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37

Abstract

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Cigarette smoking is a common risk factor associated with negative long-term outcomes in kidney transplant recipients. However, whether donor smoking decreases graft longevity or negatively impacts recipient survival after kidney transplantation remains unknown. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the long-term outcome in patients who received a kidney graft from a deceased smoking or non-smoking donor. A total of 580 patients were divided into two groups: patients who received a graft from a smoking donor (n = 276) and those who received a graft from a non-smoking donor (n = 304). Analysis of demographic factors showed that the non-smoking cohort was older, had more extended criteria donors and longer warm ischemia times. The primary composite endpoint of patient and graft survival was better in the smoking donor cohort when analyzed using Kaplan-Meier method but not when controlled for covariates in multivariate analyses. These findings do not support a previously reported negative impact of deceased donor smoking on kidney transplant recipients. Thus, the underlying results should not be interpreted in favor of a positive donor smoking history, but rather remind the transplant community that donor smoking should not be considered as a deciding factor in refusing an otherwise acceptable kidney graft.

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