Transplantation
1994 Apr 15;57(7):1064-8
Kidney transplants in black recipients. HLA matching and other factors
affecting long-term graft survival.
Koyama H, Cecka JM, Terasaki PI.
Department of Surgery, UCLA Tissue Typing Laboratory 90024.
Primary kidney transplants from living related and cadaveric donors to
black recipients failed twice as rapidly as those to white recipients
in data reported to the United Network for Organ Sharing Scientific Renal
Transplant Registry between 1987 and 1991. The projected half-life for
132 HLA-identical sibling donor transplants in blacks was 15 years versus
29 years for 1,033 whites (P < 0.001). For recipients of cadaveric
grafts, the half-lives were 5 years for blacks (n = 5,282) and 10 years
for whites (n = 14,917). The 1-year graft survival rates and half-lives
improved with HLA matching in both blacks and whites, but the 2-fold difference
in long-term survival rates persisted even among recipients of well-matched
grafts. With a zero HLA-A,B-mismatched donor, blacks had an 8-year half-life,
compared with 17 years for whites (P < 0.001). The racial difference
was most marked in young adults, with a 15-20% disparity at 3 years between
blacks and whites aged 16-30. Pediatric and older black patients had 3-year
graft survival rates similar to those of whites. Antilymphocyte globulin
or OKT3 prophylaxis improved graft survival by 2% at 1 year and 5% at
2 years among blacks, but the half-life remained 5.6 years. In contrast
to these findings in the United States, 63 blacks transplanted in Canada
had the same short- and long-term graft survival as whites, suggesting
an important long-term influence of the health care system and socioeconomic
factors. In addition to improved access to health care and improved HLA
typing of blacks, more black donors are needed to provide better matched
transplants for blacks awaiting transplants.
PMID: 8165704 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]