Korean Journal of Transplantation (Sep 2021)

Impact of delayed graft function on clinical outcomes in highly sensitized patients after deceased-donor kidney transplantation

  • Seong Gyu Kim,
  • Suyeon Hong,
  • Hanbi Lee,
  • Sang Hun Eum,
  • Young Soo Kim,
  • Kyubok Jin,
  • Seungyeop Han,
  • Chul Woo Yang,
  • Woo Yeong Park,
  • Byung Ha Chung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4285/kjt.21.0014
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35, no. 3
pp. 149 – 160

Abstract

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Background : We investigated whether the development of delayed graft function (DGF) in pre-sensitized patients affects the clinical outcomes after deceased-donor kidney transplantation (DDKT). Methods : The study included 709 kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) from three transplant centers. We divided KTRs into four subgroups (highly sensitized DGF, highly sensitized non-DGF, low-sensitized DGF, and low-sensitized non-DGF) according to panel reactive antibody level of 50%, or DGF development. We compared post-transplant clinical outcomes among the four subgroups. Results : Incidence of biopsy-proven acute rejection (BPAR) was higher in two highly sensitized subgroups than in low-sensitized subgroups. It tended to be higher in highly sensitized DGF subgroups than in the highly sensitized non-DGF subgroups. In addition, the highly sensitized DGF subgroup showed the highest risk for BPAR (hazard ratio, 3.051; P=0.005) and independently predicted BPAR. Allograft function was lower in the two DGF subgroups than in the non-DGF subgroup until one month after transplantation, but thereafter it was similar. Death-censored graft loss rates and patient mortality tended to be low when DGF developed, but it did not reach statistical significance. Conclusions: DGF development in highly sensitized patients increases the risk for BPAR in DDKT compared with patients without DGF, suggesting the need for strict monitoring and management of such cases.

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