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The Implications of Donor-Recipient Size Mismatch in Renal Transplantation

I. D. Kostakis, N. Karydis, T. Kassimatis, N. Kessaris, I. Loukopoulos

Department of Transplantation, Guy’s Hospital, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom

Meeting: 2021 American Transplant Congress

Abstract number: 848

Keywords: Graft function, Graft survival, Kidney transplantation

Topic: Clinical Science » Kidney » Kidney Deceased Donor Selection

Session Information

Session Name: Kidney Deceased Donor Selection

Session Type: Poster Abstract

Session Date & Time: None. Available on demand.

Location: Virtual

*Purpose: Transplanting kidneys small for the recipient’s size results in inferior renal graft function. Body surface area (BSA) is related to kidney size. We used the BSA index (BSAi) (Donor BSA/Recipient BSA) to assess whether the renal parenchymal mass provided by the donor is sufficient for the recipient.

*Methods: We included 26223 adult single kidney-only transplants (01/01/2007-31/12/2019) from the UK Transplant Registry. We divided renal transplants in groups: BSAi≤0.75, 0.751.25. We compared delayed graft function (DGF) rates, primary non-function (PNF) rates and graft survival among them in the entire cohort and for each donor type separately [living, donation after brain death (DBD), donation after circulatory death (DCD)] (reference category: BSAi≤0.75).

*Results: Cases with BSAi≤0.75 had the highest DGF rates in living-donor renal transplants (11.1%) (0.751.25: OR=0.318, 95%CI: 0.132-0.766, p=0.011) and DBD renal transplants (26.2%) (0.751.25: OR=0.65, 95%CI: 0.468-0.903, p=0.01). There were no significant differences in DCD renal transplants regarding DGF rates (just above 40% in all groups). No significant differences were found concerning PNF. Graft survival was similar among BSAi groups in living-donor and DBD renal transplants. DCD renal transplants with BSAi≤0.75 had shorter graft survival than the other groups (0.751.25: HR=0.45, 95%CI: 0.307-0.66, p<0.001). 5-year and 10-year graft survival rates were 73% and 58%, respectively, for DCD renal transplants with BSAi≤0.75.

*Conclusions: DGF risk is higher in living-donor and DBD renal transplants with BSAi≤0.75. Graft survival is greatly reduced in DCD renal transplants with BSAi≤0.75.

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To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Kostakis ID, Karydis N, Kassimatis T, Kessaris N, Loukopoulos I. The Implications of Donor-Recipient Size Mismatch in Renal Transplantation [abstract]. Am J Transplant. 2021; 21 (suppl 3). https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/the-implications-of-donor-recipient-size-mismatch-in-renal-transplantation/. Accessed May 11, 2025.

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