Time-Varying Determinants of Graft Failure in Pediatric Kidney Transplantation in Europe.

Background

Little is known about the time-varying determinants of kidney graft failure in children.

Methods

We performed a retrospective study of primary pediatric kidney transplant recipients (younger than 18 years) from the Eurotransplant registry (1990-2020). Piece-wise exponential additive mixed models were applied to analyze time-varying recipient, donor, and transplant risk factors. Primary outcome was death-censored graft failure.

Results

We report on 4528 kidney transplantations, of which 68% with deceased and 32% with living donor. One thousand six hundred and thirty-eight recipients experienced graft failure, and 168 died with a functioning graft. Between 2011 and 2020, the 5-year graft failure risk was 10% for deceased donor and 4% for living donor kidney transplant recipients. Risk of graft failure decreased five-fold from 1990 to 2020. The association between living donor transplantation and the lower risk of graft failure was strongest in the first month post-transplant (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.58; 95% confidence interval, 0.46 to 0.73) and remained statistically significant until 12 years post-transplant. Risk factors for graft failure in the first 2 years were deceased donor younger than 12 years or older than 46 years, potentially recurrent kidney disease, and panel-reactive antibody >0%. Other determinants of graft failure included dialysis before transplantation (until 5 years post-transplant), human leukocyte antigen mismatch 2-4 (0-15 years post-transplant), human leukocyte antigen mismatch 5-6 (2-12 years post-transplant), and hemodialysis (8-14 years post-transplant). Recipients older than 11 years at transplantation had a higher risk of graft failure 1-8 years post-transplant compared with other age groups, whereas young recipients had a lower risk throughout follow-up. Analysis of the combined effect of post-transplant time and recipient age showed a higher rate of graft failure during the first 5 years post-transplant in adolescents compared with young transplant recipients. In contrast to deceased donor younger than 12 years, deceased donor older than 46 years was consistently associated with a higher graft failure risk.

Conclusions

We report a long-term inverse association between living donor kidney transplantation and the risk of graft failure. The determinants of graft failure varied with time. There was a significant cumulative effect of adolescence and time post-transplant. The ideal donor age window was dependent on time post-transplant.

Copyright © 2023 by the American Society of Nephrology.

Overview publication

TitleTime-Varying Determinants of Graft Failure in Pediatric Kidney Transplantation in Europe.
Date2024-03-01
Issue nameClinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology : CJASN
Issue numberv19.3:345-354
DOI10.2215/CJN.0000000000000370
PubMed38030557
AuthorsCoens F, Knops N, Tieken I, Vogelaar S, Bender A, Kim JJ, Krupka K, Pape L, Raes A, Tönshoff B & Prytula A
InfoCERTAIN Registry, Bald M, Fehrenbach H, Haffner D, Hansen M, Hempel C, John U, Klaus G, König J, Lange-Sperandio B, Müller D, Oh J, Pape L, Pohl M, Sauerstein K, Schalk G, Staude H, Strotmann P, Weber LT, Weitz M, Berta L, Heindl-Rusai K
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