Living donor kidney transplantation boasts superior patient and graft survival rates compared to deceased donor kidney transplantation. However, the impact of living donor body composition (BC) on post-transplant kidney function remains uncertain. In a cohort of 293 living kidney donor-recipients pairs, we utilized linear mixed model analyses, adjusted for time and including a multiplicative interaction term of time with the donor body composition measure, and found no significant associations between any donor BC measure and the annual change in recipient post-transplantation estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) [donor body mass index (BMI): =-0.01, 95%CI -0.13; 0.11, =0.88; donor waist circumference: =0.02, 95%CI -0.02; 0.06, =0.38; donor skeletal muscle index: =-0.02, 95%CI -0.07; 0.04, =0.63; donor skeletal muscle radiation attenuation: =-0.002, 95%CI -0.06; 0.06, =0.96; donor visceral adipose tissue index: =-0.001, 95%CI -0.02; 0.02, =0.93; donor subcutaneous adipose tissue index: =-0.001, 95%CI -0.02; 0.02, =0.94; donor intramuscular adipose tissue index: =-0.12, 95%CI -0.29; 0.06, =0.19; donor total abdominal adipose tissue index: =-0.001, 95%CI -0.01; 0.01, =0.89]. Our study suggests that pre-donation BC does not affect post-transplantation recipient eGFR in donor populations with a BMI below 35 kg/m.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11625803 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneph.2024.1467669 | DOI Listing |
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