Pediatrics
2000 Oct;106(4):756-61
Racial differences in access to the kidney transplant waiting list for
children and adolescents with end-stage renal disease.
Furth SL, Garg PP, Neu AM, Hwang W, Fivush BA, Powe NR.
Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore,
Maryland, USA. sfurth@jhmi.edu
CONTEXT: Renal transplantation is the treatment of choice
for pediatric patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Black patients
wait longer for kidney transplants than do white patients.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the increased time to
transplantation for black pediatric patients is attributable not only
to a shortage of suitable donor organs, but also to racial differences
in the time from a child's first treatment for ESRD until activation on
the cadaveric kidney transplant waitlist.
DESIGN: National longitudinal cohort study.
SETTING: US Medicare-eligible, pediatric ESRD population.
PATIENTS: Children and adolescents </=19 years old at the
time of their first dialysis for ESRD between 1988 and 1993, followed
through 1996. Patients who received living donor renal transplants were
excluded from study.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Time from first dialysis for ESRD
until activation on the kidney transplant waiting list, relative hazard
of activation on the waiting list for black compared with white pediatric
patients.
RESULTS: Comparisons of the time from first dialysis
for ESRD to waitlisting among the 2162 white (60.7%) and 1122 black (31.5%)
patients studied using survival analysis revealed that blacks were less
likely to be waitlisted at any given time in follow-up. In multivariate
analysis, even after controlling for patient age, gender, socioeconomic
status, geographic region, incident year of renal failure, and cause of
ESRD, blacks were 12% less likely to be waitlisted than were whites at
any point in time (relative hazard:. 88: 95% confidence interval:.79-.97).
CONCLUSIONS: Racial disparities in access to the renal
transplant waiting list exist in pediatrics. Whether these disparities
are attributable to differences in time of presentation to a nephrologist,
physician bias in identification of transplant candidates, or patient
preferences warrants further study.
PMID: 11015519 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]