N
Engl J Med 1992 Sep 17;327(12):840-5
Comment in:
N Engl J Med. 1992 Sep 17;327(12):883-5.
Racial differences in the survival of cadaveric renal allografts. Overriding
effects of HLA matching and socioeconomic factors.
Butkus DE, Meydrech EF, Raju SS.
Department of Medicine, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson
39216.
BACKGROUND. The long-term survival of cadaveric renal
allografts is lower in black recipients than in white recipients, although
the one-year graft survival is similar in these racial groups. We sought
to determine what factors account for this disparity.
METHODS. We studied 100 consecutive recipients of primary
cadaveric renal allografts (57 were black and 43 white) at least 1 year
after transplantation (mean, 40 months); all had received identical immunosuppressive
therapy. We evaluated differences in the cause and duration of end-stage
renal disease, the number of pretransplantation transfusions, age, matching
for HLA-A, B, and DR antigens, race of the donor, insurance coverage,
and compliance to assess their effect on graft survival in both groups.
RESULTS. Allograft survival after one yearwas significantly
lower in black than in white patients (P = 0.025). According to univariate
analysis, only the recipient's age at transplantation, the number of mismatches
for HLA antigens, the type of insurance coverage, the source of referral
for transplantation, and the degree of compliance correlated significantly
with the rate of graft survival. The frequency of all variables that reduced
graft survival was higher among the blacks. According to proportional-hazards
analysis, the only factors contributing to a lower rate of graft survival
were age of less than 30 years at transplantation (relative risk, 2.3;
95 percent confidence interval, 1.3 to 4.6), mismatches for all six HLA
antigens as compared with three or fewer mismatches (relative risk, 5.6;
95 percent confidence interval, 3.3 to 9.6), and coverage by Medicaid
or Medicare (relative risk, 2.2; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.5 to
3.2). Race had no additional effect. Noncompliance was more frequent among
blacks (16 percent vs. 2 percent) and could substitute for insurance status
in the model.
CONCLUSIONS. When immunosuppression is equivalent in
black and white transplant recipients, apparently race-related differences
in the long-term survival of renal cadaveric allografts appear to be related
to other factors that affect graft survival unfavorably, notably poor
HLA matching and unfavorable socioeconomic factors.
PMID: 1508243 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
N Engl J Med 1992 Sep 17;327(12):883-5
Comment on:
N Engl J Med. 1992 Sep 17;327(12):834-9.
N Engl J Med. 1992 Sep 17;327(12):840-5.
Every kidney counts.
Braun WE.
Publication Types: Comment; Editorial
PMID: 1508250 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]