Objective: The routine drain placement following renal transplantation is currently under debate. Its benefit is uncertain and may cause complications, particularly infectious ones. Some renal transplant patients have low-productive drains, that might be unnecessary. The objective of this study is to bring to light factors influencing drain volume in kidney transplantation.

Materials And Methods: All kidney transplant patients in Tours between 2019 and 2020 were included. The characteristics of the two groups were analyzed: patients with low-productive redons (quantification less than 100mL/24h,) and patients with productive redons (≥ 100mL/24h). Univariate and multivariate analyses by logistic regression were performed to look for risk factors associated with productive drainage.

Results: One hundred and eighty-nine patients were included (67 in the low-productive group and 122 in the productive group). The results in the productive group showed a significantly higher proportion of retransplantation (P=0.015), overweight (P=0.012), low residual diuresis (P=0.041), and a significantly lower proportion of preemptive transplantation (P=0.008) and peritoneal dialysis (P=0.037). After an adjustment, the following variables remained significantly associated with greater drainage: overweight (OR=2.42, P=0.014; 95% CI [1.2-4.94]); retransplantation (OR=3.98, P=0.027; 95% CI [1.27-15.45]), and preemptive transplant (OR=0.22, P=0.013; 95% CI [0.06-0.7]).

Conclusion: The non-implementation of a redon in renal transplantation could be considered, in a selected population of non-overweight patients, with significant residual diuresis for a first transplantation which should be preemptive. This could lead to a randomized controlled trial to determine the real benefits of a routine drain replacement in kidney transplantation.

Level Of Evidence: IV.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fjurol.2024.102708DOI Listing

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