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Allyson Hart

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  51
Citations -  2554

Allyson Hart is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 37 publications receiving 1711 citations. Previous affiliations of Allyson Hart include Hennepin County Medical Center.

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OPTN/SRTR 2016 Annual Data Report: Kidney.

TL;DR: Transplant rates that had changed dramatically for some groups after implementation of the new kidney allocation system in 2014 are stabilizing, allowing for evaluation of new steady states and trends, and a decline in the proportion of living donor transplants is of concern for pediatric recipients.
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OPTN/SRTR 2015 Annual Data Report: Kidney.

TL;DR: The first full year of data after implementation of the new kidney allocation system reveals an increase in deceased donor kidney transplants among black candidates and those with calculated panel‐reactive antibodies 98%–100%, but a decrease among candidates aged 65 years or older.
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New National Allocation Policy for Deceased Donor Kidneys in the United States and Possible Effect on Patient Outcomes

TL;DR: These simulations demonstrate that the new deceased donor kidney allocation policy may improve overall post-transplant survival and access for highly sensitized candidates, with minimal effects on access to transplant by race/ethnicity and declines in kidney allocation for candidates aged ≥50 years.
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OPTN/SRTR 2018 Annual Data Report: Kidney.

TL;DR: The number of patients waiting for a kidney transplant in the US declined and numbers of both deceased and living donor kidney transplants increased, and racial disparities persisted in the proportion of living versus deceased donors.
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OPTN/SRTR 2017 Annual Data Report: Kidney.

TL;DR: The challenge of providing adequate access to kidney transplant persisted nationally, with additional dramatic regional variation, and the proportion ofliving donor kidney transplants in both adults and children continued to fall, and racial disparities in living donor kidney transplant grew in the past decade.