학술논문

Impact of Willingness to Accept Hepatitis C Seropositive Kidneys Among Hepatitis C RNA-Positive Waitlisted Patients.
Document Type
article
Source
Transplantation. 102(7)
Subject
Kidney
Humans
Hepacivirus
Hepatitis C
Kidney Failure
Chronic
RNA
Viral
Kidney Transplantation
Donor Selection
Survival Rate
Risk Factors
Retrospective Studies
Graft Survival
Middle Aged
Waiting Lists
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
Female
Male
Allografts
Transplant Recipients
Transplantation
Hepatitis
Digestive Diseases
Organ Transplantation
Hepatitis - C
Kidney Disease
Infectious Diseases
Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis
Liver Disease
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Renal and urogenital
Good Health and Well Being
Medical and Health Sciences
Surgery
Language
Abstract
BackgroundKidney transplantation from hepatitis C seropositive (HCV+) donors may benefit hepatitis C RNA-positive (RNA+) candidates, but it is unclear how the willingness to be listed for and accept such kidneys affects waitlist and transplant outcomes.MethodsIn a single-center retrospective analysis, HCV+ transplant candidates (N = 169) listed from March 2004 to February 2015 were evaluated. All RNA+ candidates were offered the option to be listed for HCV+ donors. RNA- candidates were listed only for HCV- donors.ResultsFifty-seven patients (51% of all RNA+ transplant candidates) willing to accept HCV+ donors were listed for both HCV+ and HCV- donor kidneys. During 6-year follow up, 43 (75%) of 57 patients accepting HCV+ versus 19 (35%) of 55 patients not accepting HCV+ received a deceased donor kidney transplant (P < 0.0001). Multivariable analysis demonstrated that willingness to be listed for and accept HCV+ kidneys was associated with receiving deceased donor kidney transplant (P = 0.0016). Fewer patients accepting HCV+ donors (7 [12%] vs 16 [29%]) were removed from the list due to death or deteriorated medical condition (P = 0.0117). Posttransplant patient and graft survival rates were not significantly different. Overall patient survival since the listing (combined waitlist and posttransplant survival) was similar among the groups.ConclusionsHCV RNA+ candidates had better access to transplantation and similar overall survival before the era of widespread use of direct-acting anti-HCV agents.