Computer analysis of cadaver kidney allocation procedures.
- 1 March 1993
- journal article
- Vol. 55 (3) , 516-21
Abstract
Data of 32,000 donors were utilized for a computer simulation to analyze the effect of selection parameters on the outcome of kidney transplants. If the HLA match grade is considered for organ allocation, the overall 1-year graft survival rate is up to 7% higher for first cadaver transplants and up to 12% higher for second transplants than if HLA matching is disregarded. This solely success-oriented organ allocation method, however, leads to prolonged waiting times for patients with rare HLA phenotypes. We developed a selection procedure that yields results near the theoretical optimum: 95% of all patients can be transplanted with 0-2 HLA-A, -B, -DR antigen mismatches, the average waiting time decreases to 20 months, and no patient needs to wait longer for a transplant than 6 years. The overall graft survival rate is only 0.4% lower than the rate obtainable with strictly HLA-oriented allocation. The method prevents "poorly matchable" patients from accumulating on the waiting list. Additionally, the unfavorable race ratio in the North American recipient pool can be largely normalized.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: