| Literature DB >> 30768866 |
Peter Schnuelle1,2, Katharina Drüschler3, Wilhelm H Schmitt1,2, Urs Benck2, Martin Zeier4, Bernhard K Krämer2, Gerhard Opelz5.
Abstract
Therapeutic hypothermia, hypothermic pulsatile machine perfusion (MP), and renal-dose dopamine administered to stable brain-dead donors have shown efficacy to reduce the dialysis requirement after kidney transplantation. In a head-to-head comparison of the three major randomized controlled trials in this field, we estimated the number-needed-to-treat for each method, evaluated costs and inquired into special features regarding long-term outcomes. The MP and hypothermia trials used any dialysis requirement during the first postoperative week, whereas the dopamine trial assessed >1 dialysis session as primary endpoint. Compared to controls, the respective rates declined by 5.7% with MP, 10.9% with hypothermia, and 10.7% with dopamine. Costs to prevent one endpoint in one recipient amount to approximately $17 000 with MP but are negligible with the donor interventions. MP resulted in a borderline significant difference of 4% in 3-year graft survival, but a point of interest is that the preservation method was switched in 25 donors (4.6%) for technical reasons. Graft survival was not improved with dopamine on intention-to-treat but suggested an exposure-response relationship with infusion time. MP was less efficacious and cost-effective to prevent posttransplant dialysis. Whether the benefit on early graft dysfunction achieved with any method will improve long-term graft survival remains to be established.Entities:
Keywords: clinical research/practice; critical care/intensive care management; delayed graft function (DGF); donors and donation: deceased; kidney (allograft) function/dysfunction; organ perfusion and preservation; organ procurement and allocation; organ transplantation in general
Year: 2019 PMID: 30768866 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.15317
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086