Prolonged warm ischemia time is associated with graft failure and mortality after kidney transplantation

Karthik K. Tennankore, S. Joseph Kim, Ian P.J. Alwayn, Bryce A. Kiberd

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129 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

Warm ischemia time is a potentially modifiable insult to transplanted kidneys, but little is known about its effect on long-term outcomes. Here we conducted a study of United States kidney transplant recipients (years 2000-2013) to determine the association between warm ischemia time (the time from organ removal from cold storage to reperfusion with warm blood) and death/graft failure. Times under 10 minutes were potentially attributed to coding error. Therefore, the 10-to-under-20-minute interval was chosen as the reference group. The primary outcome was mortality and graft failure (return to chronic dialysis or preemptive retransplantation) adjusted for recipient, donor, immunologic, and surgical factors. The study included 131,677 patients with 35,901 events. Relative to the reference patients, times of 10 to under 20, 20 to under 30, 30 to under 40, 40 to under 50, 50 to under 60, and 60 and more minutes were associated with hazard ratios of 1.07 (95% confidence interval, 0.99-1.15), 1.13 (1.06-1.22), 1.17 (1.09-1.26), 1.20 (1.12-1.30), and 1.23 (1.15-1.33) for the composite event, respectively. Association between prolonged warm ischemia time and death/graft failure persisted after stratification by donor type (living vs. deceased donor) and delayed graft function status. Thus, warm ischemia time is associated with adverse long-term patient and graft survival after kidney transplantation. Identifying strategies to reduce warm ischemia time is an important consideration for future study.

Langue d'origineEnglish
Pages (de-à)648-658
Nombre de pages11
JournalKidney International
Volume89
Numéro de publication3
DOI
Statut de publicationPublished - mars 1 2016

Note bibliographique

Funding Information:
KKT has received unrestricted grant funding for quality improvement projects from Amgen, Canada. IPJA has served on an Astellas Advisory Board. BAK and SJK declared no competing interests.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 International Society of Nephrology.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Nephrology

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