Background: Collapsing glomerulopathy (CG) represents severe podocyte injury with massive proteinuria, rapid progression and relative resistance to therapy. It is associated with multiple etiologies, including obliterative arteriopathy in transplants. However, its association with diabetic nephropathy (DN) has not been reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe standardized mortality ratio (SMR) has been used to provide information about adjusted survival outcomes at dialysis facilities. There has been concern that high rates of transplantation could unjustly lead to unfavorable SMR profiles for individual dialysis units because healthier patients would be removed from dialysis therapy, leaving less healthy patients in the dialysis pool. We correlated 1999 overall adjusted SMR and 1999 standardized transplantation ratio (STR) weighted for mortality patient count and count of first transplantations of patients younger than 65 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith improving survival and a decreasing probability of receiving a transplant, patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) are more likely to remain on hemodialysis therapy for more years than in the past. This study evaluates the effect of years on dialysis (vintage) on relative risk (RR) for death with and without adjustment for comorbidities and treatment factors. It also compares characteristics of patients on hemodialysis therapy for 7 years or longer with those on hemodialysis therapy for 1 to 7 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn increasing number of cadaveric kidney transplants are now performed with organs from donors who would have been deemed unsuitable in earlier times. Although good allograft outcomes have been obtained with these marginal donor transplants, it is unclear whether recipients of marginal kidney transplants achieve a reduction in long-term mortality as do recipients of "ideal" kidneys. Patients with end-stage renal disease registered on the cadaveric renal transplant waiting list between January 1, 1992, and June 30, 1997, were studied for mortality risks according to three outcomes: wait-listed on dialysis treatment with no transplant (WLD); transplantation with marginal donor kidney (MDK); and "ideal" or optimal donor kidney transplantation (IDK).
View Article and Find Full Text PDF