Donor-Recipient Race Mismatch and Graft Survival After Pediatric Heart Transplantation

被引:30
作者
Kanter, Kirk R. [1 ]
Berg, Alexandria M.
Mahle, William T.
Vincent, Robert N.
Kilgo, Patrick D.
Kogon, Brian E.
Kirshbom, Paul M.
机构
[1] Emory Univ, Sch Med, Dept Surg, Div Cardiothorac Surg, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA
关键词
RISK-FACTORS; CARDIAC TRANSPLANTATION; HEMODYNAMIC COMPROMISE; RACIAL DISPARITY; REJECTION; IMMUNOSUPPRESSION; TACROLIMUS; LONGEVITY; MORTALITY; OUTCOMES;
D O I
10.1016/j.athoracsur.2008.09.074
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background. Black recipient race has been shown to predict poorer graft survival after pediatric heart transplantation. We analyzed our single-center experience comparing graft survival by race and the impact of donor-recipient race mismatch. Methods. One hundred sixty-nine consecutive primary pediatric heart transplant patients were analyzed by donor and recipient race (white recipient, 99; black recipient, 60; other, 10). The groups were similar in preoperative characteristics. There were fewer donor-recipient race matches in blacks compared with whites (10 versus 71; p < 0.0001). Results. Although 30-day and 6-month graft survival was similar for black and white recipients (93.9% and 85.8% versus 93.3% and 83.3%, respectively), overall actuarial graft survival was significantly lower in blacks (p < 0.019). Blacks tended to have a higher incidence of positive retrospective crossmatch (n = 26, 43%) than whites (n = 29, 29%), but this was not statistically significant (p = 0.053). The median graft survival for black recipients was 5.5 years compared with 11.6 years for whites. Donor-recipient race mismatch predicted poorer graft survival (5-year graft survival 48.9% versus 72.3%; p = 0.0032). The median graft survival for donor-recipient race-matched patients was more than twice that for mismatched patients (11.6 years versus 4.4 years). Cox proportional hazard analysis showed that donor-recipient race mismatch neutralized the effect of race on graft survival. Conclusions. Graft survival after pediatric heart transplantation is inferior for black recipients compared with white recipients. These differences may be explained by a high incidence of donor-recipient race mismatch, which also predicts poorer outcome for all racial groups with pediatric heart transplantation. These data may have implications for future donor allocation schemes.
引用
收藏
页码:204 / 209
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Donor/recipient sex mismatch and survival after heart transplantation: only an issue in male recipients? An analysis of the Spanish Heart Transplantation Registry [J].
Martinez-Selles, Manuel ;
Almenar, Luis ;
Paniagua-Martin, Maria J. ;
Segovia, Javier ;
Delgado, Juan F. ;
Arizon, Jose M. ;
Ayesta, Ana ;
Lage, Ernesto ;
Brossa, Vicens ;
Manito, Nicolas ;
Perez-Villa, Felix ;
Diaz-Molina, Beatriz ;
Rabago, Gregorio ;
Blasco-Peiro, Teresa ;
De La Fuente Galan, Luis ;
Pascual-Figal, Domingo ;
Gonzalez-Vilchez, Francisco .
TRANSPLANT INTERNATIONAL, 2015, 28 (03) :305-313
[22]   Personalized Donor-Recipient Matching for Organ Transplantation [J].
Yoon, Jinsung ;
Alaa, Ahmed M. ;
Cadeiras, Martin ;
van der Schaar, Mihaela .
THIRTY-FIRST AAAI CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, 2017, :1647-1654
[23]   Effect of donor-recipient age difference on long-term graft survival in living kidney transplantation [J].
Tasaki, Masayuki ;
Saito, Kazuhide ;
Nakagawa, Yuki ;
Ikeda, Masahiro ;
Imai, Naofumi ;
Narita, Ichiei ;
Takahashi, Kota .
INTERNATIONAL UROLOGY AND NEPHROLOGY, 2014, 46 (07) :1441-1446
[24]   Effect of donor-recipient age difference on graft function and survival in live-donor kidney transplantation [J].
Ferrari, Paolo ;
Lim, Wai ;
Dent, Hannah ;
McDonald, Stephen P. .
NEPHROLOGY DIALYSIS TRANSPLANTATION, 2011, 26 (02) :702-708
[25]   Liver transplantation: survival and indexes of donor-recipient matching [J].
Silveira, Fabio ;
Silveira, Fabio Porto ;
Teixeira de Freitas, Alexandre Coutinho ;
Uili Coelho, Julio Cezar ;
Brommelstroet Ramos, Eduardo Jose ;
Macri, Matheus Martin ;
Tefilli, Nertan ;
Bredt, Luis Cesar .
REVISTA DA ASSOCIACAO MEDICA BRASILEIRA, 2021, 67 (05) :690-695
[26]   The effect of donor-recipient gender mismatch on short-and long-term graft survival in kidney transplantation: a systematic review and meta-analysis [J].
Zhou, Jing-Yi ;
Cheng, Jun ;
Huang, Hong-Feng ;
Shen, Yi ;
Jiang, Yan ;
Chen, Jiang-Hua .
CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, 2013, 27 (05) :764-771
[27]   Donor-recipient age interaction and the impact on clinical results after heart transplantation [J].
Lechiancole, Andrea ;
Vendramin, Igor ;
Sponga, Sandro ;
Guzzi, Giorgio ;
Ferrara, Veronica ;
Nalli, Chiara ;
Di Nora, Concetta ;
Bortolotti, Uberto ;
Livi, Ugolino .
CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, 2020, 34 (10)
[28]   Matchmaking Just Got Easier: Impact of Phenotypic Donor-Recipient Likeness in Heart Transplantation [J].
Lo, Brian D. ;
Suarez-Pierre, Alejandro ;
Zhou, Xun ;
Lui, Cecillia ;
Hunt, Megan F. ;
Whitman, Glenn J. ;
Choi, Chun W. ;
Kilic, Ahmet .
ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY, 2020, 109 (01) :102-109
[29]   Influence of donor-recipient sex mismatch on long-term survival of pancreatic grafts [J].
Li, Zhiwei ;
Mei, Shengmin ;
Xiang, Jie ;
Zhou, Jie ;
Zhang, Qijun ;
Yan, Sheng ;
Zhou, Lin ;
Hu, Zhenhua ;
Zheng, Shusen .
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2016, 6
[30]   Steroid Avoidance in Pediatric Heart Transplantation Results in Excellent Graft Survival [J].
Auerbach, Scott R. ;
Gralla, Jane ;
Campbell, David N. ;
Miyamoto, Shelley D. ;
Pietra, Biagio A. .
TRANSPLANTATION, 2014, 97 (04) :474-480