Lodi News-Sentinel

Mayo Clinic study confirms living kidney donor surgery is low risk for most patients

- Heather Carlson Kehren

ROCHESTER, Minn. — The risk of major complicati­ons for people who donate a kidney via laparoscop­ic surgery is minimal. That is the conclusion of a 20-year Mayo Clinic study of more than 3,000 living kidney donors. Only 2.5% of patients in the study experience­d major complicati­ons, and all recovered completely.

“The results of this study are extremely reassuring for individual­s who are considerin­g being living kidney donors. We found that this lifesaving surgery, when performed at experience­d transplant centers, is extremely safe,” says Timucin Taner, M.D., Ph.D., chair of the Division of Transplant Surgery at Mayo Clinic’s William J. von Liebig Center for Transplant­ation and Clinical Regenerati­on in Minnesota. Dr. Taner is a co-author of the study.

The study was published in Mayo Clinic Proceeding­s.

The results are significan­t, given that nearly 90,000 people in the U.S. are waiting for a lifesaving kidney transplant. Patients who receive a kidney from a living donor generally have better outcomes. Living donor kidneys usually function longer than those from deceased donors.

The retrospect­ive, single-center study is believed to be the largest research study to date to examine the risks associated with living kidney donation via laparoscop­ic surgery. The study involved 3,002 living kidney donors who underwent laparoscop­ic living kidney donor surgery at the transplant center from Jan. 1, 2000, to Dec. 31, 2019. The study tracked complicati­ons that occurred up to 120 days after surgery.

Overall, 12.4% of patients had postsurgic­al complicati­ons, with most of them experienci­ng an infection or hernia related to the incision. Most of these complicati­ons occurred in the earlier era of the study. No patients died. Researcher­s discovered 76% of those complicati­ons happened after the patient was discharged.

“While this study reinforces the safety of this surgical procedure, it does highlight the importance of following up with the donors after donation. That ensures any complicati­ons can be treated quickly without any longterm damage,” Dr. Taner says.

The study’s other authors — all of Mayo Clinic — are Xiomara Benavides, M.D.; Richard Rogers, M.D.; Ek Khoon Tan, M.B.B.S.; Massini Merzkani, M.D., Sc.D.; Sorkko Thirunavuk­karasu, M.B.B.S.; Furkan Yigitbilek, M.D.; Byron Smith, Ph.D.; Andrew Rule, M.D.; Aleksandra Kuka, M.D.; George Chow, M.D.; Julie Heimbach, M.D.; Patrick Dean, M.D.; Mikel Prieto, M.D.; and Mark Stegall, M.D.

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