Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Women's access to donated Kidneys declines
with Age, particularly compared with men
Newswise — Younger women have equivalent
access to kidney transplants compared with
their male counterparts, but older women
receive transplants much less frequently
than older men, according to a study
appearing in the March 2009 issue of the
Journal of the American Society Nephrology (JASN).
The results suggest that steps are needed to
ensure that women are provided with equal
opportunities to receive kidney transplants
as they age.
Researchers have reported that women have
less access to kidney transplants than men,
but this recent study indicates that this
disparity does not affect all women. Dorry
Segev, MD, of the Johns Hopkins Medical
Institutions in Baltimore, MD, and his
colleagues discovered this by studying the
United States Renal Data System, which
collects, analyzes, and distributes
information about end-stage kidney disease
in this country.
Their analysis included
563,197 patients with end-stage kidney
disease diagnosed between 2000 and 2005.
The investigators found that while young
women in this group had equivalent access to
transplantation when compared with their
male counterparts, access for older women
decreased significantly. Specifically, women
aged 18 to 45 years had access to
transplantation that was equivalent to men,
women aged 46 to 55 years had 3% less
access, women aged 56 to 65 years had 15%
less access, women aged 66 to 75 had 29%
less access, and women over 75 years had 59%
less access.
These disparities existed for both access to
the deceased donor waiting list as well as
access to live donations. However, the
gender disparities were limited to referral
to the waiting list—once a woman was on the
transplant list, her chances of receiving a
transplant were equivalent to a man’s.
This
is very different from other disparities in
transplantation such as race disparities, in
which African Americans are less likely to
be referred to the waiting list and are also
less likely to receive a transplant once on
the list.
Dr. Segev and his team also found that for
every age group analyzed in this study,
women had a similar or slightly higher
survival benefit from transplantation
compared with men, indicating that there is
no reason to deny women transplants as they
age.
These findings could help researchers
develop ways to reduce disparities in kidney
allocation. “Knowing that the gender
disparity is limited to older women
indicates that efforts should be made to
identify specific differences between older
men and older women—rather than general
differences between all men and women—in an
effort to minimize the gender disparity in
access to transplantation,” said Dr. Segev.
The article, entitled “Older Age and Comorbidities as
Effect Modifiers of Transplant Gender
Disparities,” will appear online at
http://jasn.asnjournals.org/ on
Wednesday, January 7, 2009, and in the March
2009 print issue of JASN.
ASN is a not-for-profit organization of
11,000 physicians and scientists dedicated
to the study of nephrology and committed to
providing a forum for the promulgation of
information regarding the latest research
and clinical findings on kidney diseases.
ASN publishes JASN, the Clinical Journal of
the American Society of Nephrology (CJASN),
the Nephrology Self-Assessment Program (NephSAP),
and the ASN Kidney News.
... ..
...
...