Race and delayed kidney allograft function.

H I Feldman, J E Burns, D A Roth, J A Berlin, L Szczech, R Gayner, S Kushner, K L Brayman, R A Grossman
Author Information
  1. H I Feldman: Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics and the Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-6021, USA.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Allograft survival among black recipients is poorer than among whites. Delayed allograft function is associated with a significant reduction in renal allograft survival. The relationship between delayed allograft function and black race is incompletely specified and was the focus of this investigation.
METHODS: A non-concurrent study of 325 recipients of cadaveric allografts followed for the occurrence of delayed allograft function defined as dialysis during the first week following transplantation for the principal analysis. A secondary definition of delayed allograft function was formulated based on the serum creatinine 2 weeks after transplantation. Unadjusted and adjusted logistic regression analysis were used to examine the unconfounded relationship between race and delayed allograft function.
RESULTS: Fifty-seven of 91 (62.6%) black recipients experienced delayed allograft function compared to 113 of 234 (48.3%) whites. The odds ratio for black race as a predictor of delayed allograft function was 1.80, P=0.02, (95% CI, 1.09, 2.95). This finding was stable despite adjustment for other predictors of delayed allograft function in a multivariate model, but the precision of this estimate was less (P=0.10) because of missing data. Additionally, adjusted models with imputed values for missing covariates, models using a secondary definition of delayed allograft function, and models excluding patients whose cyclosporin therapy was delayed, all consistently demonstrated a similar association between black race and delayed allograft function.
CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated an increased risk of delayed allograft function among black recipients. This relationship may play a role in the poorer allograft outcomes experienced by black recipients. Given the negative effect of delayed allograft function on allograft survival, efforts to identify its modifiable risk factors should be a high priority.

MeSH Term

Adult
Age Factors
Black People
Diabetic Nephropathies
Female
Graft Survival
Histocompatibility Testing
Humans
Kidney Transplantation
Male
Middle Aged
Risk Factors
Time Factors
Tissue Preservation
White People

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0allograftfunctiondelayedblackrecipientsracesurvivalamongrelationshipmodelspoorerwhitesstudytransplantationanalysissecondarydefinition2adjustedexperienced1P=0missingdemonstratedriskBACKGROUND:AllograftDelayedassociatedsignificantreductionrenalincompletelyspecifiedfocusinvestigationMETHODS:non-concurrent325cadavericallograftsfollowedoccurrencedefineddialysisfirstweekfollowingprincipalformulatedbasedserumcreatinineweeksUnadjustedlogisticregressionusedexamineunconfoundedRESULTS:Fifty-seven91626%compared113234483%oddsratiopredictor800295%CI0995findingstabledespiteadjustmentpredictorsmultivariatemodelprecisionestimateless10dataAdditionallyimputedvaluescovariatesusingexcludingpatientswhosecyclosporintherapyconsistentlysimilarassociationCONCLUSIONS:increasedmayplayroleoutcomesGivennegativeeffecteffortsidentifymodifiablefactorshighpriorityRacekidney

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