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Kidneys from Patients with Small Renal Tumours: A Novel Source of Kidneys for Transplantation - Abstract Show Comments PDF Print E-mail
  
Friday, 02 May 2008

Renal Transplant Unit and Southern Clinical School, University of Queensland, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Australia.

To report the use of a novel donor source as a further option to increase the number of patients who might be able to receive a renal transplant.

Between May 1996 and July 2007, 43 kidneys were transplanted using kidneys obtained from patients with small (<3 cm diameter) incidentally detected tumours. After bench surgery to excise the tumour, they were all successfully transplanted into patients who were elderly or had significant comorbidities.

Apart from four patients who died from unrelated illnesses, all grafts continued to function with a median and mean follow-up of 25 and 32 months. The follow-up, which included 3-monthly renal ultrasonography and chest X-rays, showed only one case of tumour recurrence, which occurred 9 years after transplantation; the patient remains stable under observation after 18 months.

From our experience we consider that where nephrectomy is used for small, localized, incidentally detected renal tumours, the kidney should be considered for transplantation into carefully selected patients. Such patients with numerous medical comorbidities might benefit from renal transplantation, but not survive the waiting period if they are dependent on a deceased donor graft. Paradoxically the use of these marginal kidneys has the potential to increase the quality and length of life of these patients, despite the apparent contradiction of an intuitive principle of organ transplantation and immunosuppression.

Written by
Nicol DL, Preston JM, Wall DR, Griffin AD, Campbell SB, Isbel NM, Hawley CM, Johnson DW.

Reference
BJU Int. 2008 Apr 24. Epub ahead of print.
doi:10.1111/j.1464-410X.2008.07562.x

PubMed Abstract
PMID:18435810

UroToday.com Renal Transplantation and Vascular Disease Section

 

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