| Literature DB >> 33837847 |
Arpana Iyengar1, M I McCulloch2.
Abstract
Kidney transplantation is the ideal choice of kidney replacement therapy in children as it offers a low risk of mortality and a better quality of life. A wide variance in the access to kidney replacement therapies exists across the world with only 21% of low- and low-middle income countries (LLMIC) undertaking kidney transplantation. Pediatric kidney transplantation rates in these under-resourced regions are reported to be as low as < 4 pmcp [per million child population]. A robust kidney failure care program forms the cornerstone of a transplant program. Even the smallest transplant program entails a multidisciplinary workforce and expertise besides ensuring family commitment towards long-term care and economic burden. In general, the short-term graft survival rates from under-resourced regions are comparable to most high-income countries (HIC) and the challenge lies in the long-term outcomes. This review focuses on specific issues relevant to kidney transplants in children in under-resourced regions by highlighting limitations in the capacity and health workforce, regulatory norms, medical issues, economic burden, factors beyond financial hardship and ethical considerations relevant to these regions. Finally, the perspective of strengthening transplant programs in these regions should factor in the bigger challenges that exist in achieving the health-related sustainable development goals by 2030.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers; Challenges; Developing nations; Low middle-income countries; Outcomes; Paediatric kidney transplantation; Under-resourced regions
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33837847 PMCID: PMC8035609 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-021-05070-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.651
Fig. 1Total rate (pmp) of kidney transplants undertaken across regions from the global database on donation and transplantation website
Fig. 2Essential components of a sustainable paediatric transplant program at various levels of health care relevant to LLMIC based on reference 33. *Universal health coverage
Kidney graft survival of live related transplants in LLMICs
| Country-wise published data | Graft survival % (LRD) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 yr | 5 yr | 10 yr | 15 yr | |
| Brazil [ | 90 | 72 | 59 | |
| South Africa [ | 82 | 44 | 23 | |
| India [ | 90–98 | 80–92 | 66–85 | 77.6% (1 centre) |
| Pakistan [ | 96 | 81 | - | |
| Thailand [ | 100 | 86 | - | |
| Iran [ | 90 | 81 | 62 | |
| Chile [ | 87 | 78 | - | |
| Egypt [51] | 93 | 73 | - | |
| Turkey [ | 91 | 67 | - | |
| Jordan [ | 97 | 91 (3yr) | - | |
| Saudi Arabia [ | 98 | 92 | - | |
| Kuwait [ | 98 | - | 84 | |
Approximate costs related to paediatric kidney replacement therapies from two centres belonging to LMIC
| Kidney replacement therapies for a child | Indiaa Cost (USD ex rate = 69) | South Africab USD |
|---|---|---|
| Maintenance dialysis monthly | ||
| CAPD costs (2 bags dialysate + medications + clinic visit) | 489 | 650 |
| HD (3 per week) + medications + clinic visit) | 311 | 450 |
| Transplant-related treatment | ||
| Cost of LRD transplantation | 9420 | 10,800 |
| Monthly immunosuppression | 145 | 390 |
| Monthly transplant clinic visit | 51 | 150 |
USD United States Dollar, CAPD continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis, HD hemodialysis
aSt John’s Medical College Hospital, Bangalore—a non-government, “not for profit” academic Institution
bRed Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital, University of Cape Town–Government hospital
Fig. 3Components of health-related SDG that potentially impact paediatric transplantation in under-resourced regions [7, 87]