Lethbridge Herald

U.S. taking steps to track kidney donor health

- Lauran Neergaard THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — WASHINGTON

The big unknown when someone donates a kidney: The long-term health consequenc­es. Now the U.S. is taking a step toward finally tracking how living donors fare over decades — just as candidates are getting some new cautions to consider.

Specialist­s insist the surgery seldom brings serious complicati­ons for the donor. What happens later in life is less certain.

British researcher­s reported Monday that living kidney donors are more likely to develop later kidney failure than non-donors — and female donors may experience a pregnancy complicati­on, problemati­c high blood pressure

Overall, the chances of trouble still are pretty low, according to the analysis of internatio­nal donor studies published in Annals of Internal Medicine. But there hasn’t been enough research to advise donor candidates — especially younger ones — about who’s really most at risk and if there are protective steps they could take.

“For those of us who counsel potential donors, there is reason for pessimism that we will soon be able to estimate individual risk with any precision,” Drs. Peter Reese of the University of Pennsylvan­ia and Emilio Poggio of the Cleveland Clinic wrote in an accompanyi­ng editorial.

Until there’s better informatio­n, it might be safer to accept donations from middle-aged donors than younger ones, the duo proposed. For example, the best studies of how the remaining kidney functions have tracked donors for eight to 15 years, which “should not be particular­ly reassuring when advising a 25-year-old donor,” they wrote.

Meanwhile, the United Network for Organ Sharing, which oversees the U.S. transplant system, has added the cautions in Monday’s report to the risk informatio­n given to would-be donors.

And 10 transplant centres are about to pilot-test a new Living Donor Collective — an attempt to track donors’ health for the remainder of their lives, instead of the mere two years of monitoring now required. The goal is to eventually expand to all U.S. transplant programs.

“The more we understand risk, and disclose it transparen­tly, the more we’re ensuring public trust,” said Dr. Krista Lentine of Saint Louis University, one of the pilot sites, who also directs UNOS’ living donor committee.

More than 95,000 people are on the national waiting list for a kidney. Of 19,848 transplant­s performed last year, 5,811 were thanks to living donors, according to UNOS. Living donations shorten the yearslong wait, and those transplant­s tend to last longer.

Surgery always brings risks, but donor deaths from the operation are rare — three deaths for every 10,000 donors, according to the most-cited estimate. About eight per cent of donors experience surgical complicati­ons such as bleeding or blood clots, according to another study.

What about later? University of Cambridge researcher­s examined dozens of internatio­nal studies that tracked donors for varying lengths of time. Two concerns emerged:

• One study found for every 10,000 people tracked over 15 years, 31 living donors experience­d kidney failure compared to four non-donors.

• Among post-donation pregnancie­s, high blood pressure known as preeclamps­ia occurred in 11 per cent of donors in one study, about twice the rate of nondonors.

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