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Outcome of living unrelated (commercial) renal transplantation. | LitMetric

Outcome of living unrelated (commercial) renal transplantation.

Kidney Int

Department of Nephrology and Department of Surgery, Istanbul School of Medicine, Capa-Istanbul, Turkey.

Published: October 2001

AI Article Synopsis

  • Many patients with end-stage renal disease seek commercial transplants in Third World countries due to a lack of available organs, despite known risks and ethical concerns.
  • A study analyzed the outcomes of 115 patients who received commercial transplants between 1992 and 1999, revealing a high rate of complications, including rare infections.
  • While patient survival rates for commercial transplants were similar to those from living related transplants, graft survival rates were significantly lower, indicating the risks associated with commercial transplantation.

Article Abstract

Background: Due to inadequate cadaveric and living related organ supply, many end-stage renal disease patients go to Third World countries for commercial transplantation, although the high risk of complications is well established and ethical arguments debate this practice.

Methods: The midterm outcome of 115 patients who had been commercially transplanted in various countries and admitted to our center for post-transplant care and follow-up between 1992 and 1999 was retrospectively analyzed. Data considering the transplantation practice and post-transplant course were collected from the patient files. Outcome of these patients was compared with those with a living related transplant performed at our center.

Results: The patients (91 male and 24 female; mean age of 42 +/- 12 years) were transplanted in India (N = 106), Iraq (N = 7), and Iran (N = 2). The mean follow-up period was 64.5 +/- 23.9 months. Post-transplant course was complicated by numerous surgical and/or medical complications, and many of the latter were unconventional infections caused by malaria, invasive fungal infections, and pneumonia due to various opportunistic pathogens. Overall, 52 patients still have functioning allografts, while 22 lost their grafts, 20 died, and 21 were lost to follow-up. Graft survival rates at two, five, and seven years were 84, 66, and 53%, respectively, for the study group, while it was 86, 78, and 73% for living related transplantations performed at our center (P = 0.036). Patient survival rates for the same periods were 90, 80, and 74% for the study group and 90, 85, and 80% for the living related transplantations (P = 0.53).

Conclusions: Besides the ongoing ethical debate, commercial transplantation carries a high risk of unconventional complications, and despite that the patient survival rate is comparable, graft survival is worse than conventional living related transplantations at the midterm.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1523-1755.2001.00951.xDOI Listing

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