BACKGROUND: Disparities in access to kidney transplantation exist, yet few studies investigated educational level as a determinant of access to and outcomes after kidney transplantation. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTINGS & PARTICIPANTS: Nationally representative sample of incident US dialysis patients, in which 3,245 patients reported their educational level. PREDICTOR: Educational level, categorized as some high school, high school graduate, some college, and college graduate. OUTCOMES & MEASUREMENTS: Access to kidney transplantation was defined as time from first dialysis treatment to: (1) the day of being wait-listed and (2) first kidney transplantation. Outcomes after kidney transplantation were: (3) all-cause mortality and graft failure ([4] all-cause and [5] death censored). Using Cox regression, we studied the relationship between predialysis educational level and access to and outcomes after kidney transplantation. RESULTS: During follow-up, 692 patients were wait-listed and 670 underwent kidney transplantation. Of those, 164 died and 241 lost their allograft (121 from nondeath causes). After multivariate adjustment, college graduates experienced 3 times greater rates of wait-listing (hazard ratio, 2.81; 95% confidence interval, 2.21 to 3.58) or kidney transplantation (hazard ratio, 3.06; 95% confidence interval, 2.38 to 3.92) compared with patients without a high school degree (P for trend across educational level for both outcomes < 0.001). Although mortality was not associated with educational level, increased rates of death-censored allograft loss were observed with less education (P for trend = 0.03). LIMITATIONS: Not a randomized study. CONCLUSION: The latter finding is novel and important and requires confirmation. Its possible mechanisms (eg, adherence to immunosuppressants) warrant additional study.
BACKGROUND: Disparities in access to kidney transplantation exist, yet few studies investigated educational level as a determinant of access to and outcomes after kidney transplantation. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTINGS & PARTICIPANTS: Nationally representative sample of incident US dialysis patients, in which 3,245 patients reported their educational level. PREDICTOR: Educational level, categorized as some high school, high school graduate, some college, and college graduate. OUTCOMES & MEASUREMENTS: Access to kidney transplantation was defined as time from first dialysis treatment to: (1) the day of being wait-listed and (2) first kidney transplantation. Outcomes after kidney transplantation were: (3) all-cause mortality and graft failure ([4] all-cause and [5] death censored). Using Cox regression, we studied the relationship between predialysis educational level and access to and outcomes after kidney transplantation. RESULTS: During follow-up, 692 patients were wait-listed and 670 underwent kidney transplantation. Of those, 164 died and 241 lost their allograft (121 from nondeath causes). After multivariate adjustment, college graduates experienced 3 times greater rates of wait-listing (hazard ratio, 2.81; 95% confidence interval, 2.21 to 3.58) or kidney transplantation (hazard ratio, 3.06; 95% confidence interval, 2.38 to 3.92) compared with patients without a high school degree (P for trend across educational level for both outcomes < 0.001). Although mortality was not associated with educational level, increased rates of death-censored allograft loss were observed with less education (P for trend = 0.03). LIMITATIONS: Not a randomized study. CONCLUSION: The latter finding is novel and important and requires confirmation. Its possible mechanisms (eg, adherence to immunosuppressants) warrant additional study.
Authors: Ernesto P Molmenti; Asha Alex; Lisa Rosen; Mohini Alexander; Jeffrey Nicastro; Jingyan Yang; Eric Siskind; Leesha Alex; Emil Sameyah; Madhu Bhaskaran; Nicole Ali; Amit Basu; Mala Sachdeva; Stergiani Agorastos; Prejith Rajendran; Prathik Krishnan; Poornima Ramadas; Leo Amodu; Joaquin Cagliani; Sameer Rehman; Adam Kressel; Christine B Sethna; Georgios C Sotiropoulos; Arnold Radtke; George Sgourakis; Richard Schwarz; Steven Fishbane; Alessandro Bellucci; Gene Coppa; Horacio Rilo; Christine L Molmenti Journal: Int J Angiol Date: 2015-09-15
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Authors: Ajay Israni; Carl E Dean; Nicholas Salkowski; Suying Li; Lloyd E Ratner; Hamid Rabb; Neil R Powe; S Joseph Kim Journal: Transplantation Date: 2014-09-15 Impact factor: 4.939