Saturday, January 13, 2018

Landscape of Living Multi-organ Donation in the United States: A Registry-Based Cohort Study

 2018 Jan 11. doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000002082. [Epub ahead of print]

Landscape of Living Multi-organ Donation in the United States: A Registry-Based Cohort Study.

Author information

1
Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, Baltimore, MD.
2
Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
3
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD.
4
Center for Abdominal Transplantation, St. Louis University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

The donation of multiple allografts from a single living donor is a rare practice, and the patient characteristics and outcomes associated with these procedures are not well described.

METHODS:

Using the SRTR registry, we identified 101 living multi-organ donors and their 133 recipients.

RESULTS:

The 49 sequential (donations during separate procedures) multi-organ donors provided grafts to 81 recipients: 21 kidney-then-liver, 15 liver-then-kidney, 5 lung-then-kidney, 3 liver-then-intestine, 3 kidney-then-pancreas, 1 lung-then-liver, and 1 pancreas-then-kidney. Of these donors, 38% donated 2 grafts to the same recipient and 15% donated 2 grafts as non-directed donors. Compared to recipients from first-time, single organ living donors, recipients from second-time living donors had similar graft and patient survival. The 52 simultaneous (multiple donations during one procedure) multi-organ donors provided 2 grafts to 1 recipient each: 48 kidney-pancreas and 4 liver-intestine. Donors had median (IQR) 13.4 [8.3-18.5] years of follow-up for mortality. There was one reported death of sequential donor (2.5 years after second donation). Few post-donation complications were reported over median (IQR) 116 (0-295) days follow-up; however, routine living donor follow-up data were sparse. Recipients of kidneys from second-time living donors had similar graft (p=0.8) and patient survival (p=0.4) when compared to recipients from first-time living donors. Similarly recipients of livers from second-time living donors had similar graft survival (p=0.8) and patient survival (p=0.7) when compared to recipients from first-time living donors.

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