Early and long-term results using older kidneys from cadaver or living donors.

2001 
Abstract The persisting shortage of organs for transplantation justifies the use of all possible donors. We compared results for 110 patients, who received solitary kidneys from cadaver donors over age 60 years (OCD) with those for 976 patients, who were transplanted with kidneys from 11-49-year-old cadaver donors, whom we defined as "ideal" age. Although the 4% incidence of primary nonfunction and the 24% rate of delayed graft function were significantly higher (p < 0.001) in the OCD group compared with the ideal group (0.8% and 8.0%, respectively), OCD kidneys can offer good results when low-risk recipients are carefully selected and the cold ischemia time is sharply reduced. Moreover, graft survival rates for 14 OCD grafts, implanted in patients under age 45 were 93% at one, 3 and 10 years compared with 79%, 74% and 42% at the same time points for 96 OCD recipients over age 45. The rate of delayed graft function was higher among 19 OCD grafts preserved for more than 20 hours, and these grafts yielded significantly lower survival rates than 91 OCD grafts preserved for less than 20 hours; with rates of 67%, 58% and 44% and 85%, 81% and 51%, respectively, after one, 3 and 10 years. Thirty-five kidneys from living donors over age 60 had comparable overall graft survival rates to living donor kidneys from donors under age 60 (92%, 92% and 92% vs. 92%, 88% and 80% at one, 3 and 10 years, respectively). An original point scoring system, based only on macroscopic evaluation of the graft, avoids the need for a biopsy and does not prolong cold ischemia time. Microvascular bench reconstructions of the renal artery, damaged by atherosclerosis, expand the possibility for safe transplantation of older kidneys without performing a double renal transplant.
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