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Journal ArticleDOI

Improved Graft Survival after Renal Transplantation in the United States, 1988 to 1996

TLDR
There has been a substantial increase in short-term and long-term survival of kidney grafts from both living and cadaveric donors since 1988.
Abstract
Background The introduction of cyclosporine has resulted in improvement in the short-term outcome of renal transplantation, but its effect on the long-term survival of kidney transplants is not known. Methods We analyzed the influence of demographic characteristics (age, sex, and race), transplant-related variables (living or cadaveric donor, panel-reactive antibody titer, extent of HLA matching, and cold-ischemia time), and post-transplantation variables (presence or absence of acute rejection, delayed graft function, and therapy with mycophenolate mofetil and tacrolimus) on graft survival for all 93,934 renal transplantations performed in the United States between 1988 and 1996. A regression analysis adjusted for these variables was used to estimate the risk of graft failure within the first year and more than one year after transplantation. Results From 1988 to 1996, the one-year survival rate for grafts from living donors increased from 88.8 to 93.9 percent, and the rate for cadaveric grafts increased...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of late acute rejection after cadaveric kidney transplantation

TL;DR: AR had a deleterious impact on graft survival, particularly if occurring after 90 d, and AR episodes should therefore be divided into early and late phases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predicting graft survival among kidney transplant recipients: A Bayesian decision support model

TL;DR: This study offers a novel methodological solution to this prediction problem by analyzing the retrospective database including > 31,000 U.S. patients and introducing a comprehensive feature selection framework that accounts for medical literature, data analytics methods and elastic net (EN) regression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hospitalizations for Cytomegalovirus Disease after Renal Transplantation in the United States

TL;DR: Even in modern era, renal transplant recipients were at high risk for hospitalizations for CMV disease, which were associated with decreased patient survival and prospective trials of prophylactic antiviral therapy should be performed in these subgroups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rabbit antithymocyte globulin (thymoglobulin): a review of its use in the prevention and treatment of acute renal allograft rejection.

TL;DR: Clinical data suggest that rATG is an effective and generally well tolerated option for the prevention and treatment of acute renal graft rejection in renal transplant recipients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of Graft Mass on the Clinical Outcome of Kidney Transplants

TL;DR: It is reported that the smallest kidneys transplanted into the largest recipients (donor kidney weight/recipient body weight [DKW/RBW] <2 g/kg, n = 88) increased their clearance by 2.38 ml/min every month for 6 mo (P < 0.0001).
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Nonparametric Estimation from Incomplete Observations

TL;DR: In this article, the product-limit (PL) estimator was proposed to estimate the proportion of items in the population whose lifetimes would exceed t (in the absence of such losses), without making any assumption about the form of the function P(t).
Journal ArticleDOI

Mycophenolate mofetil for the prevention of acute rejection in primary cadaveric renal allograft recipients. U.S. Renal Transplant Mycophenolate Mofetil Study Group.

TL;DR: This study demonstrated that MMF administered at a dosage of 2 g or 3 g daily, in combination with maintenance CsA and corticosteroids as triple therapy following ATGAM® induction therapy, is more effective than an otherwise identical regimen that includes azathioprine instead of MMF in preventing acute allograft rejection in first cadaveric renal transplant patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of tacrolimus (FK506) and cyclosporine for immunosuppression after cadaveric renal transplantation. FK506 Kidney Transplant Study Group

TL;DR: Tacrolimus is more effective than cyclosporine in preventing acute rejection in cadaveric renal allograft recipients, and significantly reduces the use of antilymphocyte antibody preparations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk factors for chronic rejection in renal allograft recipients.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that acute rejection, CsA dosage < 5 mg/kg/day at 1 year, and infection are the major risk factors for the development of chronic rejection.
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