End-stage renal disease is a significant complication of heart transplantation (HTx), but our understanding of dialysis outcomes in HTx recipients remains limited. We performed a retrospective analysis looking at dialysis mortality in HTx recipients as compared to a matched dialysis cohort. We also examined outcomes with respect to kidney transplantation (KTx) in these cohorts. 2709 incident HTx recipients were captured from the Canadian Organ Replacement Register between 1981 and 2002. The incidence of dialysis after HTx was 3.9% (n = 105) and carried a greater crude mortality compared to HTx recipients not requiring dialysis (56.2% vs. 35.9%, p < 0.001). Compared to the matched dialysis cohort, survival of HTx patients on dialysis was also significantly worse (19% vs. 40%, p = 0.003). In those receiving a KTx, survival did not differ between the two cohorts; however, in those that did not receive a KTx the survival was significantly lower in the dialysis post-HTx group compared to the matched dialysis cohort (15.7% vs. 35.2%, p < 0.025). Our analysis suggests mortality on dialysis following HTx is greater than would be expected from a similar dialysis population, and KTx may abrogate some of this increased risk. Attention should be placed on preventing chronic kidney disease progression following HTx.
Studies from the United States have shown that renal allograft failure is associated with a high mortality rate. The purpose of this study was to determine whether transplant failure was associated with survival in a recent cohort of kidney transplant recipients with different characteristics and a distinct health care system from the United States. Cox regression was used to model allograft loss as a time-dependent variable with patient survival as the primary outcome in 4743 kidney transplant recipients from the Canadian Organ Replacement Register. During follow-up 607 (12.8%) patients had allograft failure and 411 (8.7%) died. Patients with a functioning transplant had an unadjusted death rate of 2.06 per 100 patient years that increased to 5.14 per 100 patient years following allograft failure. After controlling for important confounding variables, allograft failure was found to increase the risk of death by over threefold compared to patients who maintained transplant function (adjusted hazard ratio, 3.39; 95% CI, 2.75-4.16; p < 0.0001). In conclusion, this analysis has shown that kidney transplant failure is an independent predictor of mortality following renal transplantation in a Canadian population. This finding supports the premise that it is the loss of transplant function, rather than patient or system-related issues, that is the main factor contributing to outcome.
Mortality was greater for OLT recipients on dialysis than would be expected from a matched, nontransplant, dialysis cohort. Kidney transplantation may abrogate some of this increased mortality risk.
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