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Identical Kidneys Are Discarded at Higher Rates When Labeled as High KDPI

C. Crannell, J. Perkins, C. Kling

University of Washington, Seattle, WA

Meeting: 2022 American Transplant Congress

Abstract number: 8

Keywords: Allocation, Kidney transplantation

Topic: Clinical Science » Kidney » 31 - Kidney Deceased Donor Allocation

Session Information

Session Name: Kidney Deceased Donor Allocation

Session Type: Rapid Fire Oral Abstract

Date: Sunday, June 5, 2022

Session Time: 3:30pm-5:00pm

 Presentation Time: 4:00pm-4:10pm

Location: Hynes Ballroom C

*Purpose: The kidney donor risk index (KDRI) and percentile conversion kidney donor profile index (KDPI) were introduced with the Kidney Allocation System (KAS) to provide a continuous measure of kidney donor quality. Kidneys with a KDPI > 85% (KDPI85) require additional informed consent from the recipient and are colloquially referred to as ‘high KDPI’. The median KDRI and the 85th percentile KDRI (KDRI85) are recalculated annually reflecting the procured kidneys from the year prior; consequently, the KDPI85 cutoff changes every year. This study aims to examine changes in the KDRI85 for procured kidneys over time, determine kidney utilization around the KDPI85 cutoff and explore if there is a “high KDPI” labeling effect. We hypothesize that identical KDRI kidneys from different years would have different utilization based on being above or below the KDPI85 cutoff.

*Methods: KDRI to KDPI Mapping Tables from 2012 to 2020 were used to determine the yearly KDRI85 value. OPTN data was used to examine discard rates for KDPI 5% above and below this threshold. To determine if there was a High KDPI labeling effect, organ utilization after KAS implementation was examined for the subgroup of kidneys with a KDRI range that fell below the KDPI85 cutoff (KDPILOW) and above the cutoff (KDPIHIGH).

*Results: The KDRI85 varied by year, between 1.768 and 1.888. Kidney discard rates were significantly lower for KDPI 81-85 kidneys compared with KDPI 86-90 kidneys, by 8.9% (36.2% vs 45.1%, p<0.001). Kidneys with a KDRI between 1.785 - 1.849 were classified as KDPIHIGH in years 2015-2017 and KDPILOW in years 2018-2020 (Table 1). The discard rate was 44.9% when labeled as KDPIHIGH and 39.1% when labeled as KDPILOW (p<0.01). The number of kidneys transplanted per donor decreased from 1.11 for KDPILOW to 0.94 for KDPIHIGH (p<0.01)

*Conclusions: The KDRI85 changes yearly, impacting which kidneys are labeled as KDPIHIGH. Organ discard significantly increases for the 5% of kidneys above the KDRI85 marker compared with below. For kidneys with identical KDRI, the label of “high KDPI” significantly increases discard rates. Consideration should be given to removing the high KDPI label and additional consent process.

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To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Crannell C, Perkins J, Kling C. Identical Kidneys Are Discarded at Higher Rates When Labeled as High KDPI [abstract]. Am J Transplant. 2022; 22 (suppl 3). https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/identical-kidneys-are-discarded-at-higher-rates-when-labeled-as-high-kdpi/. Accessed May 11, 2025.

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