Friday, April 14, 2023

Kidney transplants from donors who died from illegal drug use

 There was a time when the modal deceased kidney donor had suffered a head injury in an auto accident, but that time is long gone, due to increased auto safety and to the rise in drug overdose deaths.  Those latter deaths now constitute a large proportion of deceased donors, and here's a report from Canada confirming that those kidneys work well in their new owners.

Xie, Max Wenheng, Sean Patrick Kennan, Amanda Slaunwhite, and Caren Rose. "Observational Study Examining Kidney Transplantation Outcomes Following Donation From Individuals That Died of Drug Toxicity in British Columbia, Canada." Canadian Journal of Kidney Health and Disease 10 (2023): 20543581231156853.

"Abstract:

"Background: The illicit drug toxicity (overdose) crisis has worsened across Canada, between 2016 and 2021 more than 28 000 individuals have died of drug toxicity. Organ donation from persons who experience drug toxicity death has increased in recent years. 

"Objective: This study examines whether graft loss after kidney transplantation differed by donor cause of death. 

Design: Retrospective cohort. 

"Setting: Provincial transplant program of British Columbia, Canada. 

"Patients: Transplant recipients who received kidney transplantation from deceased donors aged 12 to 70 years between 2013 and 2019 (N = 1012). 

"Measurements: Transplant recipient all cause graft loss (graft loss due to any cause including death) was compared by donor cause of death from drug toxicity or other. 

"Methods: Five-year Kaplan-Meier estimates of all-cause graft survival, and 3-year complete as well as stratified inverse probability of treatment weighted Cox proportional hazards models were conducted. 

"Results: Drug toxicity death donors donated to 25% (252/1012) of kidney transplantations. Drug toxicity death donors were more likely to be young, white, males, with fewer comorbidities such as diabetes or hypertension but were more likely to have a terminal serum creatinine ≥1.5 mg/dL or be hepatitis C virus (HCV) positive. Unadjusted 5-year estimate of all cause graft survival was 97% for recipients of drug toxicity donor kidneys and 83% for recipients of non-drug toxicity donor kidneys (P < .001). Recipients of drug toxicity death donor kidneys had decreased risk of all cause graft loss compared to recipients of non-drug toxicity death donor kidneys (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.30, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.12-0.77, P = .012). This is primarily due to the reduced risk of all-cause graft loss for recipients of younger (≤35 years) drug toxicity death donor kidneys (HR: 0.05, 95% CI: 0.00-0.55, P = .015). 

"Limitations: Potential selection bias, potential unmeasured confounding. 

"Conclusions: Donation after drug toxicity death is safe and should be considered more broadly to increase deceased donor kidney donation."

...

"illicit drug toxicity remains the leading unnatural cause of death in BC accounting for more deaths than homicides, suicides, and motor vehicle incidents combined.

...

"The United States is also undergoing an opioid epidemic which began earlier than Canada and has recorded similar increases in organ donation from individuals that died of illicit drug toxicity.9-11 Studies in the United States have found that recipient survival after kidney transplantation from individuals who died from drug toxicity was similar for recipients of kidneys from donors that died of any other cause of death."

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