Arch
Intern Med 1988 Jun;148(6):1305-9
Age, sex, and race inequality in renal transplantation.
Kjellstrand CM.
Department of Medicine, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
We calculated the chance of receiving a kidney transplant in the United
States in 1983, and in the Midwest from 1979 through 1985, considering
age, sex, and race. In the United States, 23,026 patients began long-term
dialysis and 6112 (27%) received a kidney transplant. Transplant rates
were 31% for men and 21% for women. White patients had a 30% rate and
nonwhite patients a 20% rate. Patients less than 11 to 35 years old had
an 85% rate vs a 3% rate for those older than 56 years. When race, age,
and sex were analyzed together, nonwhite patients aged 21 to 45 years
had only half the chance of receiving a transplant compared with white
patients of the same age and sex. Women aged 46 to 60 years had less than
half the chance of receiving a transplant when compared with men of the
same age and race. These data show that there are age, sex, and race imbalances
in the distribution of renal transplantation. We believe these imbalances
only partially have a morally neutral biological, medical, social, and
cultural explanation and that there should be a fairer distribution of
kidney transplants.
PMID: 3288159 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]