PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Nearly half of kidney recipients in live donor transplant chains are minorities

Finding allays fears that minorities would be disadvantaged by expansion of the donor pool

Nearly half of kidney recipients in live donor transplant chains are minorities
2012-09-19
(Press-News.org) The largest U.S. multicenter study of living kidney transplant donor chains showed that 46 percent of recipients are minorities, a finding that allays previous fears that these groups would be disadvantaged by expansion of the donor pool through this type of exchange process.

The study of a series of chain transplantations performed from February 2008 to June 2011 at 57 centers nationwide included 272 kidney transplants that paired organ donors who were incompatible with their relatives with strangers providing organs for altruistic reasons or with others donating an organ to an unknown patient because they were not a match for their own relatives.

"Of all living donor kidney transplants performed in the United States in 2011, only 33 percent were to ethnic minorities. So the fact that nearly 50 percent of the chain transplants were ethnic minorities is a real game changer," said senior study author and UCLA transplant surgeon Dr. Jeffrey Veale. "This collaborative team has been able to show that with donor chains we can broaden, increase and diversify the population of patients who can receive kidney transplants."

"We were incredibly happy with the results," said study first author Dr. Marc Melcher, a transplant surgeon at Stanford Hospital & Clinics and assistant professor of multi-organ transplantation surgery at Stanford University. "It demonstrates that through the cooperation of altruistic strangers we can generate multiple transplants and reduce the competition for deceased organs."

The study, which appears in the September issue of the peer-reviewed American Journal of Transplantation, notes that the larger percentage of minority recipients may be a result of large urban centers with more ethnic diversity actively participating in chains.

"About 30 percent of patients needing a kidney transplant discover that their friends and relatives are incompatible as donors. Donor chains create opportunities for potentially endless donor-recipient pairings," Melcher said.

A chain can start when an altruistic donor generously donates a kidney to a stranger on dialysis. This recipient's original incompatible willing donor then passes on the generosity to another patient on dialysis to keep the chain going, essentially "paying it forward," and the process can be repeated to extend the chain further.

This collaborative effort is made possible thanks to kidney registries like the National Kidney Registry, a nonprofit organization that uses a specialized computer program to match donors and recipients across the country. The registry has helped hundreds of patients who have antibodies to their loved ones receive a kidney from a stranger as part of a chain of transplants. The world's longest kidney transplant chain, facilitated by the registry, involved 60 patients.

Donated kidneys can remain outside the body on ice for prolonged periods of time, allowing the organs to be shipped via commercial airlines to recipients in another state. This expands the donor pool for difficult-to-match patients awaiting transplants, like many included in this study.

About 92,000 people currently are on the kidney transplant waiting list in the United States, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing. California alone has more than 16,000 people on the list. Patients often can wait more than a decade for a suitable organ, and about 19 percent of those on the waiting list are seeking their second, third or fourth kidneys.

Increasing the pool of available kidneys is vital and means more transplants could be performed annually, getting patients off dialysis earlier, Melcher said.

"Dialysis is typically three times a week, four hours a day. The procedure is extremely draining, which is why patients often lose their jobs and cannot lead normal lives," Melcher said. "The worst part is that over 4,000 patients a year die while on the waiting list for kidney transplants. So many lives could be saved if we can expand the living kidney transplantation donor chain program."

Increasing the number of kidney transplants per year also reduces health care expenditures, Veale said. It costs about $70,000 a year to maintain a patient on dialysis, while it costs only about $20,000 to care for a patient who has undergone transplantation, most of that expense is for medications and follow-up visits. Additionally, living donor kidneys last about twice as long as organs removed from deceased donors. Therefore, the health system saves approximately $500,000 each time a patient receives a transplant, Veale said. It is one of the few examples in medicine where the standard of care is much less expensive than the next option — dialysis, in this case.

The next step, which Veale reported recently in the New England Journal of Medicine, is to expand the donor pool internationally, possibly into Canada or Europe, similar to what happened with the bone marrow registry.

"A kidney that could free a patient in California from the constraints of dialysis may be found in a donor who lives in London, Barcelona or Vancouver," said Veale, who also is director of the UCLA Kidney Exchange Program.

One recipient's story:

For La Canada resident Keenan Cheung, a 47-year-old housing director at the University of Southern California, a kidney transplant chain was life changing. Cheung was born with polycystic kidney, an inherited disease in which many cysts form in the kidneys. He was fine until his 40th birthday, when his kidneys started to fail. He put his name on a waiting list for a donor kidney and began continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis, a four-times-a-day process that required a tube in his peritoneum by which waste products were removed from the blood and excess fluid drained from his body.

After several years on dialysis, he suffered a grand mal seizure in January of 2009. His health quickly deteriorated. He already knew that his wife, Jeanne, and his brother and mother were not compatible donors. Joining a kidney chain became the ideal solution for him. Cheung received a kidney from an African American man in Long Beach who couldn't donate his kidney to his mother because they were incompatible. Cheung's wife, Jeanne, then donated her kidney to a Hispanic girl from Commerce who needed an organ but didn't have a match.

Cheung got his transplant in June of 2009 and is doing wonderfully, living a full and happy life and coaching all three of his sons' sporting teams.

"I was on death's doorstep. I was miserable," Cheung said of his life prior to the transplant. "Today I could not be better. I'm healthy, I exercise, I coach my sons' teams. I can golf, swim, hike — all of the things I couldn't do on dialysis. Getting this kidney was life changing."



INFORMATION:

About the Kidney Transplant Programs at UCLA and Stanford

The UCLA Kidney Transplant Program performed its first kidney transplant in 1957 and for the past 50 years has continued to be a national leader in research and academic excellence. The program has performed over 6,000 kidney transplants with some of the best outcomes in the country. UCLA's program has pioneered the use of steroids to combat rejection and the shipment of living donor kidneys by commercial airlines. In addition, the international standard for tissue typing and database for organ sharing was developed at UCLA. For more information, visit www.transplants.ucla.edu/KidneyExchange.

Stanford's Kidney Transplant Program has performed more than 1,200 kidney transplants since its inception in 1991 and consistently places among the top centers in a nationwide field of 246 centers, according to the latest report from the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients. It was the only center, as evaluated by SRTR reports in 2009 and 2010, to achieve statistically higher-than-expected results in both patient and kidney survival at the one- and three-year marks after transplantation, with a one-year survival rate of about 98 percent. For more information, visit stanfordhospital.org/transplant.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Nearly half of kidney recipients in live donor transplant chains are minorities

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Warming ocean could start big shift of Antarctic ice

2012-09-19
Fast-flowing and narrow glaciers have the potential to trigger massive changes in the Antarctic ice sheet and contribute to rapid ice-sheet decay and sea-level rise, a new study has found. Research results published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reveal in more detail than ever before how warming waters in the Southern Ocean are connected intimately with the movement of massive ice-sheets deep in the Antarctic interior. "It has long been known that narrow glaciers on the edge of the Antarctica act as discrete arteries termed ice streams, ...

Did a 'forgotten' meteor have a deadly, icy double-punch?

2012-09-19
When a huge meteor collided with Earth about 2.5 million years ago and fell into the southern Pacific Ocean it not only could have generated a massive tsunami but also may have plunged the world into the Ice Ages, a new study suggests. A team of Australian researchers says that because the Eltanin meteor – which was up to two kilometres across - crashed into deep water, most scientists have not adequately considered either its potential for immediate catastrophic impacts on coastlines around the Pacific rim or its capacity to destabilise the entire planet's climate system. "This ...

Specialist urologists should handle vasectomy reversal cases says 10-year study

2012-09-19
Vasectomy reversals should be carried out by urology specialists with access to appropriate micro-surgical training and assisted reproductive technologies and not general urology surgeons, according to research published in the October issue of BJUI. The findings are based on a series of surveys carried out among consultant members of the British Association of Urological Surgeons (BAUS) over a ten-year period. "It is clear from our research that couples should not be seen by urologists with diverse interests, but by those with appropriate knowledge of all of the ...

Vall d’Hebron, VHIO and SOLTI head up an international 'dream team' against breast cancer

2012-09-19
Barcelona, 19 September 2012. The Vall d'Hebron Breast Cancer Unit, the Vall d'Hebron Institute of Oncology (VHIO) and SOLTI, an academic breast cancer research group , are heading up a multi-centre international study involving four Spanish and three North American research centres*. The aim of the study is to investigate whether BKM120, a drug that inhibits the PI3K pathway (phosphatidylinositol-3-Kinase) can be an effective treatment against triple-negative breast cancer. At present it is known that breast cancer can be classified into different subtypes with varying ...

War causes mental illness in soldiers

2012-09-19
One in every two cases of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in soldiers remains undiagnosed. This is the conclusion reached by a working group led by Hans-Ulrich Wittchen et al. They report their study in the current issue of Deutsches Ärzteblatt International (Dtsch Arztebl Int 2012; 109(35): 559), which is a special issue focusing on the prevalence of psychological stress in German army soldiers. In a second original article, results reported by Jens T Kowalski and colleagues show that more female soldiers contact the psychosocial support services provided by Germany's ...

How close were we to armageddon? 50 years on, why should we still study the Cuban Missile Crisis?

2012-09-19
Why, fifty years on, is the Cuban Missile Crisis still a subject of considerable fascination for academics and professionals alike? Should we still be studying it, and if so, how? These are just some of the questions addressed in a special issue in the journal International Relations, published by SAGE. As one of the most intensely studied events of the twentieth century, the Cuban Missile Crisis could suffer from "over examination", yet as Guest Editor Len Scott, Professor of International Politics and Dean of Social Science at Aberystwyth University, remarks: "While ...

Self-forming biological scaffolding

2012-09-19
A new model system of the cellular skeletons of living cells is akin to a mini-laboratory designed to explore how the cells' functional structures assemble. A paper about to be published in EPJ E by physicist Volker Schaller and his colleagues from the Technical University Munich, Germany, presents one hypothesis concerning self-organisation. It hinges on the findings that a homogeneous protein network, once subjected to stresses generated by molecular motors, compacts into highly condensed fibres. The contractile machinery inside cells is arguably the most prominent ...

Angling for gold

2012-09-19
A study on how gold atoms bond to other atoms using a model that takes into account bonds direction has been carried out by physicist Marie Backman from the University of Helsinki, Finland, and colleagues. These findings, which are about to be published in EPJ B, are a first step toward better understanding how gold binds to other materials through strong, so-called covalent, bonds. What scientists need is an empirical model, based on a so-called potential, that describes the gold-gold bond in a reliable way. Most previous models only accounted for interactions in the ...

Barack Obama good for Israel; Barack Hussein Obama less so

2012-09-19
President Obama's middle name, Hussein, makes Israelis – both Jewish and Arab – perceive him as less pro-Israeli, reveals a new study conducted by the University of Haifa and the University of Texas. The study has just been published in the journal Political Behavior. "Even though the Israeli public has extensive information about the American President and his positions, their opinions can still be swayed by cultural cues, such as a name that in this case is perceived as Arabic," says Dr. Israel Waismel-Manor of the University of Haifa who co-authored the study. Similar ...

NEIKER and INRA discover that BDA symptoms in grapevine leaves are a sign of esca

2012-09-19
This press release is available in Spanish.Scientists at the Basque Institute of Agricultural Research and Development, NEIKER-Tecnalia, and the National Institute of Agricultural Research in Bordeaux (INRA) have come to the conclusion that alleged symptoms of 'black dead arm' (BDA) on grapevine leaves are, in fact, those of esca disease in its initial phase. Esca and BDA are diseases that affect the trunk of vines and cause serious losses to the wine-making and grape-growing sectors every year. The symptoms produced by esca and BDA in vine leaves are reminiscent of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New take on immunotherapy reinvigorates T cells by blocking uptake of energy-sapping cancer byproducts

How much climate change is in the weather?

Flagship AI-ready dataset released in type 2 diabetes study

Shaking it up: An innovative method for culturing microbes in static liquid medium

Greener and cleaner: Yeast-green algae mix improves water treatment

Acquired immune thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) associated with inactivated COVID-19 vaccine CoronaVac

CIDEC as a novel player in abdominal aortic aneurysm formation

Artificial intelligence: a double-edged sword for the environment?

Current test accommodations for students with blindness do not fully address their needs

Wide-incident-angle wideband radio-wave absorbers boost 5G and beyond 5G applications

A graph transformer with boundary-aware attention for semantic segmentation

C-Path announces key leadership appointments in neurodegenerative disease research

First-of-its-kind analysis of U.S. national data reveals significant disparities in individual well-being as measured by lifespan, education, and income

Exercise programs help cut new mums’ ‘baby blues’ severity and major depression risk

Gut microbiome changes linked to onset of clinically evident rheumatoid arthritis

Signals from the gut could transform rheumatoid arthritis treatment

Pioneering research reveals some of the world’s least polluting populations are at much greater risk of flooding fuelled by climate change

UK’s health data should be recognized as critical national infrastructure, says independent review

A 36-gene predictive score of anti-cancer drug resistance anticipates cancer therapy outcomes

Someone flirts with your spouse. Does that make your partner appear more attractive?

Hourglass-shaped stent could ease severe chest pain from microvascular disease

United Nations ratifies framework to protect people on cash app

Oklahoma State basketball team joins the Nation of Lifesavers

Power of aesthetic species on social media boosts wildlife conservation efforts, say experts

Researchers develop robotic sensory cilia that monitor internal biomarkers to detect and assess airway diseases

Could crowdsourcing hold the key to early wildfire detection?

Reconstruction of historical seasonal influenza patterns and individual lifetime infection histories in humans based on antibody profiles

New study traces impact of COVID-19 pandemic on global movement and evolution of seasonal flu

Presenting a Janus channel of membranes for complete oil-and-water separation

COVID-19 restrictions altered global dispersal of influenza viruses

[Press-News.org] Nearly half of kidney recipients in live donor transplant chains are minorities
Finding allays fears that minorities would be disadvantaged by expansion of the donor pool