Is Laparoscopic Donor Nephrectomy the New Criterion Standard?
- 1 August 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 135 (8) , 943
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.135.8.943
Abstract
Hypothesis The posttransplantation renal function outcomes between consecutive open donor and laparoscopic donor nephrectomies (LDNs) are similar and affect living donation. Design Using the medical records of renal living donor–recipient pairs, 36 consecutive open donor nephrectomies were compared with the subsequent 100 LDNs. Data collected on donor characteristics included demographics (age, race, sex, weight, and height), renal vascular and ureteral anatomical features, surgical information (blood loss, number of blood transfusions, operating time, warm ischemia time, and renal injury), complications, and length of hospital stay. Recipients' data also included renal function information (serum creatinine level on postoperative days 7 and 30) and ureteral complications during the initial hospital stay. Setting A not-for-profit tertiary care teaching hospital in a metropolitan area. Patients Adults who had end-stage renal disease and received a living donation kidney. Main Outcome Measures Operative time, warm ischemia time, blood loss, and posttransplantation serum creatinine level. Results Patient characteristics were not significantly different between the open donor nephrectomy and LDN groups. No right kidney LDNs were done because of the shortness of the right renal vein; and, after the initial experience, left kidneys with more than 2 arteries were excluded. Warm ischemia time was recorded only for LDN, and it was found that a warm ischemia time of 10 minutes or longer was associated with difficulty in extraction and was uniformly associated with elevated mean serum creatinine levels on postoperative day 7. Conclusions The length of hospital stay was decreased and cosmetic result enhanced. The number of living donors has increased from 28 in 1997 to 53 in 1998 and to 63 in 1999 at our institution. The length of hospital stay, incidence of complications, and comparable kidney quality indicate that LDN should be the initiating procedure for most patients.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- LONG-TERM GRAFT SURVIVAL AFTER TRANSPLANTATION WITH KIDNEYS FROM UNCONTROLLED NONHEARTBEATING DONORS1Transplantation, 1999
- Comparison of Open and Laparoscopic Live Donor NephrectomyAnnals of Surgery, 1997
- LAPAROSCOPIC ASSISTED LIVE DONOR NEPHRECTOMY - A COMPARISON WITH THE OPEN APPROACH1Transplantation, 1997