Journal of Clinical Medicine (Oct 2020)

HbA1c and Aortic Calcification Index as Noninvasive Predictors of Pre-Existing Histopathological Damages in Living Donor Kidney Transplantation

  • Kosuke Tanaka,
  • Shigeyoshi Yamanaga,
  • Yuji Hidaka,
  • Sho Nishida,
  • Kohei Kinoshita,
  • Akari Kaba,
  • Toshinori Ishizuka,
  • Satoshi Hamanoue,
  • Kenji Okumura,
  • Chiaki Kawabata,
  • Mariko Toyoda,
  • Asami Takeda,
  • Akira Miyata,
  • Masayuki Kashima,
  • Hiroshi Yokomizo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9103266
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. 3266

Abstract

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We previously reported that allografts from living donors may have pre-existing histopathological damages, defined as the combination of interstitial fibrosis (ci), tubular atrophy (ct), and arteriolar hyalinosis (ah) scores of ≧1, according to the Banff classification. We examined preoperative characteristics to identify whether the degree of these damages was related to metabolic syndrome-related factors of donors. We conducted a single-center cross-sectional analysis including 183 living kidney donors. Donors were divided into two groups: chronic change (ci + ct ≧ 1 ∩ ah ≧ 1, n = 27) and control (n = 156). Preoperative characteristics, including age, sex, blood pressure, hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), aortic calcification index (ACI), and psoas muscle index (PMI), were analyzed. Comparing the groups, the baseline estimated glomerular filtration rate was not significantly different; however, we observed a significant difference for ACI (p = 0.009). HbA1c (p = 0.016) and ACI (p = 0.006) were independent risk factors to predict pre-existing histopathological damages, whereas PMI was not. HbA1c correlated with ct scores (p = 0.035), and ACI correlated with ci (p = 0.005), ct (p = 0.021), and ah (p = 0.017). HbA1c and ACI may serve as preoperative markers for identifying pre-existing damages on the kidneys of living donors.

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