AI Article Synopsis

  • Kidney transplantation significantly lowers mortality for patients with ESKD from type 1 diabetes, but there's debate over whether to perform it alone or alongside pancreas transplantation.
  • A study analyzed outcomes from 87 deceased donor kidney transplants and 66 simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplants, revealing that SPKTx patients had fewer cardiovascular events and higher kidney function but similar overall survival rates and graft survival compared to KTx recipients.
  • While pancreas transplantation showed benefits in reducing cardiovascular risk and proteinuria, it did not enhance overall patient or kidney graft survival in the long-term follow-up.

Article Abstract

Background: Kidney transplantation (KTx) markedly reduces mortality in patients with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) caused by type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM). The outstanding issue is whether transplantation should be limited only to KTx, with further insulinotherapy, or combined with pancreas transplantation in patients with ESKD/T1DM. The goal of this study was to compare the results of simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation (SPKTx) and deceased donor KTx and to identify factors affecting patient and kidney graft survival in patients with ESKD/T1DM.

Methods: Eighty-seven deceased donor KTx and 66 SPKTx operated on in the Silesia region of Poland between 1998 and 2013 were included in the retrospective analysis.

Results: During the mean 6.7 ± 3.6 years of follow-up, fewer cardiovascular episodes were observed in SPKTx recipients than in KTx recipients (1.5% vs 12.6%; P < .05). Five-year patient survival (80.7% in SPKTx vs 77.5% in KTx) and kidney graft survival (66.1% in SPKTx vs 70.4% in KTx) did not differ between study groups. There were no differences in patient survival (log-rank test, P = .99) or kidney graft survival (P = .99) based on Kaplan-Meier curves. Multivariable Cox proportional hazard analysis failed to identify factors explaining patient and kidney graft survival. Five-year pancreas graft survival was 58.9%. SPKTx recipients had significantly higher estimated glomerular filtration rates during the 7-year posttransplant period and less frequently developed proteinuria (6.1% vs 23%; P < .01).

Conclusions: Pancreas transplantation reduced cardiovascular risk and prevented the development of proteinuria but did not improve patient and kidney graft survival in recipients with T1DM in the 7-year follow-up period.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.transproceed.2016.01.082DOI Listing

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