2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2018.03.047
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Different Risk Factors for Graft Survival Between Living-Related and Deceased Donor Kidney Transplantation

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Cited by 12 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…33 Risk factors for graft survival in LRKT were pretransplant dialysis duration (HR = 1.023 per month; P = .046), DGF (HR = 5.785; P = .02), and acute rejection (HR = 2.706; P = .04), whereas risk factors for graft survival in DDKT were recipient age (HR = 1.066 per year; P = .004), recipient history of diabetes (HR = 3.011; P = .03), pretransplant positive PRAs (HR = 3.353; P = .02), and donor HTN (HR = 2.660; P = .046). 34 Of note in this cohort, patients who received LRKT were younger (33 vs 44 years old), healthier (less diabetes, shorter duration of dialysis), and received organs with closer HLA matches than DDKT recipients. 33,34 Donor Management.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
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“…33 Risk factors for graft survival in LRKT were pretransplant dialysis duration (HR = 1.023 per month; P = .046), DGF (HR = 5.785; P = .02), and acute rejection (HR = 2.706; P = .04), whereas risk factors for graft survival in DDKT were recipient age (HR = 1.066 per year; P = .004), recipient history of diabetes (HR = 3.011; P = .03), pretransplant positive PRAs (HR = 3.353; P = .02), and donor HTN (HR = 2.660; P = .046). 34 Of note in this cohort, patients who received LRKT were younger (33 vs 44 years old), healthier (less diabetes, shorter duration of dialysis), and received organs with closer HLA matches than DDKT recipients. 33,34 Donor Management.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…34 Of note in this cohort, patients who received LRKT were younger (33 vs 44 years old), healthier (less diabetes, shorter duration of dialysis), and received organs with closer HLA matches than DDKT recipients. 33,34 Donor Management. As the waitlist for kidney transplants grows, interest in expanding the pool of available organs increases.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
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“…The study population consisted of 330 adult patients (i.e., age ≄ 19 years) who underwent elective LDKT at Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital between January 2016 and December 2017. Pediatric patients (i.e., age < 19 years), those undergoing deceased-donor or ABO-incompatible KT, patients undergoing multiorgan transplantation including the kidney, and those undergoing re-transplantation were excluded from the study because these patients require various and complex immunosuppression regimens or surgical technique application [13,14,15,16,17]. Patients with defective or missing recipient and donor graft data were also excluded.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…immunological and hormonal changes compared to living donors (25,26), other studies have reported desirable results from the function of the DD renal transplantation (27,28). Even though various studies have been carried out in order to determine the effect of cadaveric donors on renal transplantation rejection, these estimations vary from one study to another, and some cases have rejected the results of other studies.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%