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Donor
Kidneys from Hepatitis C patients needlessly
denied to patients with that infection
Newswise — More than half of donor kidneys
in the United State infected with hepatitis
C are thrown away, despite the need among
hepatitis C patients who may die waiting for
an infection-free organ, Johns Hopkins
research suggests.
In a study of national data published online
in the American Journal of Transplantation,
the researchers say that while outcomes are
slightly worse when hepatitis C-positive
patients receive hepatitis C-positive
organs, the advantages of more timely
transplants may outweigh the risk of waiting
— perhaps more than year — for a hepatitis
C-negative kidney.
Patients with hepatitis C-positive make up
about 12 percent of the population with
kidney failure, and those patients have an
increased risk of death on dialysis compared
with those without the virus, the study
says.
“Nationwide, kidneys from infected donors
are inappropriately thrown out and denied to
patients in need,” says transplant surgeon
Dorry L. Segev, an associate professor of
surgery at the Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine and the study’s leader.
“Many transplant centers don’t use these
kidneys at all, effectively consigning
hepatitis C-positive patients to an average
unnecessary wait of a year longer for an
uninfected organ.”
That, he says, “means an extra year on
dialysis, in which the risk of death is 10
to 15 percent.”
The use of hepatitis C-positive kidneys has
been controversial in the past, owing in
part to a 1 percent difference in one-year
survival for patients who receive the
infected kidneys and a 2 percent difference
in three-year survival. Segev says this
difference “is easily made up for by getting
off dialysis sooner.”
Hepatitis C-positive kidneys rarely go to
hepatitis C-negative patients because the
organ would infect the recipient with the
chronic liver disease.
In looking at data from more than 93,000
deceased kidney donors between 1995 and
2009, Segev and his colleagues found that
hepatitis C-positive kidneys were two and a
half times more likely to be discarded than
hepatitis C-negative kidneys. Since 1995,
more than 3,500 hepatitis C-positive kidneys
were thrown away.
“That’s a lot of kidneys we could have
transplanted into people who need them,”
Segev says.
Meanwhile, he adds, some 4,800 hepatitis C
patients got hepatitis C-negative kidneys.
“Using hepatitis C-positive kidneys in
people who are infected with the virus could
help those with hepatitis C and also expand
the organ supply for everyone.”
One-third of the nation’s transplant
centers, according to the study, did not use
any hepatitis C-positive kidneys for their
hepatitis C patients, while 13 percent
transplanted more than half of their
hepatitis C patients with hepatitis
C-positive kidneys.
At The Johns Hopkins Hospital, where doctors
specialize in patients with hepatitis C and
kidney failure, a patient with hepatitis C
could likely be successfully transplanted
with a hepatitis C-positive kidney within
several months of being put on the waiting
list, Segev says. Recipients of hepatitis
C-positive kidneys waited, on average, 395
days less than those recipients who waited
for hepatitis C-negative kidneys at the same
transplant center, the study shows.
Other Johns Hopkins researchers on the study
include Lauren M. Kucirka, Sc.M.; Andrew L.
Singer, M.D., Ph.D.; R. Loris Ros, Sc.M.;
Robert A. Montgomery, M.D., Ph.D.; and Nabil
N. Dagher, M.D.
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