2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2009.12.052
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Impact of Recipient and Donor Nonimmunologic Factors on the Outcome of Deceased Donor Kidney Transplantation

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Cited by 21 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…22 These kidneys were refused by 2 transplant centers before finally being accepted by a third. We found that the rate of creatinine clearance at organ recovery did not affect graft or patient survival or final graft function but did influence the frequency of DGF.…”
Section: Scd-optimal Scd-suboptimalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…22 These kidneys were refused by 2 transplant centers before finally being accepted by a third. We found that the rate of creatinine clearance at organ recovery did not affect graft or patient survival or final graft function but did influence the frequency of DGF.…”
Section: Scd-optimal Scd-suboptimalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A study on the influence of nonimmunologic factors on the outcome of extended criteria among deceased donor kidney transplants showed that donor age did not affect graft function or survival, or patient mortality. [5] The complement-dependent lymphocytoxicity with donor peripheral blood lymphocytes as the target is a standard pretransplant test. A positive cross match of more than 50% cell death by cytotoxicity clearly indicates the presence of antibodies to class I antigens.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cibrik et al 2002;Oppenheimer, Aljama et al 2004); this is partially offset by the reduction in mortality associated with reduced wait-list time. In addition, female-to-male donation, major donor kidney weight/recipient weight inadequacy, cerebrovascular accidents (CVA) as the cause of donor death and the presence of donor comorbidities such as diabetes have an adverse impact on graft and/or patient survival (Feldman, Fazio et al 1996;Giral, Nguyen et al 2005;Ahmad, Cole et al 2009;Shaheen, Shaheen et al 2010). However, utilization of kidneys from deceased donors who had developed acute renal failure prior to organ procurement does not appear to have an unfavorable effect on graft outcome (Deroure, Kamar et al 2010).…”
Section: Deceased Donor Kidney Transplantationmentioning
confidence: 99%