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Living Donation Discussion and News => Living Donation in the News => Topic started by: Clark on February 21, 2014, 09:25:28 AM

Title: The Role of Procurement Biopsies in Acceptance Decisions for Kidneys Retrieved f
Post by: Clark on February 21, 2014, 09:25:28 AM
http://cjasn.asnjournals.org/content/early/2014/02/18/CJN.07610713.abstract?sid=f02d4cab-78ed-4f36-8f64-bf0493eaa34b

The Role of Procurement Biopsies in Acceptance Decisions for Kidneys Retrieved for Transplant
Bertram L. Kasiske*,†, Darren E. Stewart‡, Bipin R. Bista§, Nicholas Salkowski*, Jon J. Snyder*,‖, Ajay K. Israni*,†‖, Gretchen S. Crary¶, John D. Rosendale‡, Arthur J. Matas**, Francis L. Delmonico††
doi: 10.2215/​CJN.07610713
CJASN February 2014 CJN.07610713

Abstract

Background and objectives There is a shortage of kidneys for transplant, and many patients on the deceased donor kidney transplant waiting list would likely benefit from kidneys that are currently being discarded. In the United States, the most common reason given for discarding kidneys retrieved for transplant is procurement biopsy results. This study aimed to compare biopsy results from discarded kidneys with discard attributed to biopsy findings, with biopsy results from comparable kidneys that were successfully transplanted.

Design, setting, participants, & measurements In this retrospective, observational, case-control study, biopsy reports were examined from 83 kidneys discarded in 2010 due to biopsy findings (cases), 83 contralateral transplanted kidneys from the same donor (contralateral controls), and 83 deceased donors randomly matched to cases by donor risk profile (randomly matched controls). A second procurement biopsy was obtained in 64 of 332 kidneys (19.3%).

Results The quality of biopsy reports was low, with amounts of tubular atrophy, interstitial inflammation, arteriolar hyalinosis, and acute tubular necrosis often not indicated; 69% were wedge biopsies and 94% used frozen tissue. The correlation between first and second procurement biopsies was poor; only 25% of the variability (R2) in glomerulosclerosis was explained by biopsies being from the same kidney. The percentages of glomerulosclerosis overlapped substantially between cases, contralateral controls, and randomly matched controls: 17.1%±15.3%, 9.0%±6.6%, and 5.0%±5.9%, respectively. Of all biopsy findings, only glomerulosclerosis>20% was independently correlated with discard (cases versus contralateral controls; odds ratio, 15.09; 95% confidence interval, 2.47 to 92.41; P=0.003), suggesting that only this biopsy result was used in acceptance decisions. One-year graft survival was 79.5% and 90.7% in contralateral and randomly matched controls, respectively, versus 91.6% among all deceased donor transplants in the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients.

Conclusions Routine use of biopsies could lead to unnecessary kidney discards.