Adv
Ren Replace Ther 1997 Jan;4(1):40-5
Poorer graft survival in African-American transplant recipients cannot
be explained by HLA mismatching.
Chertow GM, Milford EL.
Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical
School, Boston, MA, USA.
African-American kidney-transplant recipients have exhibited a higher
rate of graft failure than whites and other patient groups. Many have
attributed this discrepancy to disparities in HLA matching against a predominantly
white donor pool. We compared the relative risks of cadaveric and living-related
graft failure in African-American, white, Hispanic, and Asian transplant
recipients, adjusting for a variety of demographic and clinical covariates.
The relative risks of graft failure were increased by 44% and 73% in African-American
recipients of cadaveric and living-related organs, respectively. Although
Asians were subject to a comparable degree of HLA mismatching, cadaveric
graft survival in Asian recipients was superior to that in whites. These
results suggest that other variables not captured by registry data account
for the increase in graft failure observed in African-Americans. More
focused investigation into the causes and prevention of graft failure
in African-Americans is required.
PMID: 8996619 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]