Saturday, August 27, 2022

Patient preferences for taking an offered kidney versus waiting for a better one

 Here's a paper whose title announces in its first two words that it's unusual for the transplant literature: "Patient Preferences."   It sensibly asks about preferences for a transplant now versus a long future wait.  That's relevant, because the waiting list for a kidney is often years long.


Patient Preferences for Waiting Time and Kidney Quality, by Sanjay MehrotraJuan Marcos GonzalezKarolina SchantzJui-Chen YangJohn J. Friedewald and Richard Knight, CJASN Aug 2022, CJN.01480222; DOI: 10.2215/CJN.01480222

Visual Abstract

Abstract

"Background and objectives Approximately 20% of deceased donor kidneys are discarded each year in the United States. Some of these kidneys could benefit patients who are waitlisted. Understanding patient preferences regarding accepting marginal-quality kidneys could help more of the currently discarded kidneys be transplanted.

Design, setting, participants, & measurements This study uses a discrete choice experiment that presents a deceased donor kidney to patients who are waiting for, or have received, a kidney transplant. The choices involve trade-offs between accepting a kidney today or a future kidney. The options were designed experimentally to quantify the relative importance of kidney quality (expected graft survival and level of kidney function) and waiting time. Choices were analyzed using a random-parameters logit model and latent-class analysis.

Results In total, 605 participants completed the discrete choice experiment. Respondents made trade-offs between kidney quality and waiting time. The average respondent would accept a kidney today, with 6.5 years of expected graft survival (95% confidence interval, 5.9 to 7.0), to avoid waiting 2 additional years for a kidney, with 11 years of expected graft survival. Three patient-preference classes were identified. Class 1 was averse to additional waiting time, but still responsive to improvements in kidney quality. Class 2 was less willing to accept increases in waiting time for improvements in kidney quality. Class 3 was willing to accept increases in waiting time even for small improvements in kidney quality. Relative to class 1, respondents in class 3 were likely to be age ≤61 years and to be waitlisted before starting dialysis, and respondents in class 2 were more likely to be older, Black, not have a college degree, and have lower Karnofsky performance status.

Conclusions Participants preferred accepting a lower-quality kidney in return for shorter waiting time, particularly those who were older and had lower functional status."

HT: Martha Gershun

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