Press Rebecca, Carrasquillo Olveen, Nickolas Thomas, Radhakrishnan Jai, Shea Steven, Barr R Graham
Division of General Medicine, Department of Medicine, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Transplantation. 2005 Oct 15;80(7):917-24. doi: 10.1097/01.tp.0000173379.53347.31.
There are known racial disparities in renal graft survival. Data are lacking comparing associations of race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status with graft failure and functional status after transplantation. Our goal was to test if African-American and Hispanic race/ethnicity and poverty are associated with worse outcomes following renal transplantation.
We performed a retrospective cohort study using a nationwide registry (United Network for Organ Sharing). We studied 4,471 adults who received renal transplants in 1990. Outcomes were graft failure and functional status over 10 years.
Cumulative incidence of graft failure was higher among African-Americans and Hispanics than whites (77% vs. 64% vs. 60 %; P<0.001) and among transplant recipients living in the poorest areas (70% vs. 58% in the richest; P<0.001). African-American and Hispanic race/ethnicity were independently predictive of graft failure (RR 1.8, 95% CI 1.6-1.9; RR 1.3, 95% CI 1.2-1.6, respectively) in multivariate analyses but poverty status was not (RR 1.0, 95% CI 0.9-1.1). Days with impaired functional status were higher for African-Americans compared to whites (RR 1.6, 95% CI 1.3-1.9) but not independent of poverty. Poverty was independently associated with impaired functional status (RR 1.3, 95% CI 1.0-1.6).
African-Americans and Hispanics had higher rates of graft failure compared to whites after adjustment for poverty and other covariates whereas poverty, but not race/ethnicity, was related to functional status following renal transplantation. National datasets should include individual-level measures of socioeconomic status in order to improve evaluation of social and environmental causes of disparities in renal transplant outcomes.
肾移植的移植物存活率存在已知的种族差异。缺乏关于种族/族裔和社会经济地位与移植后移植物失败及功能状态之间关联的比较数据。我们的目标是检验非裔美国人和西班牙裔的种族/族裔以及贫困是否与肾移植后较差的预后相关。
我们使用全国性登记系统(器官共享联合网络)进行了一项回顾性队列研究。我们研究了1990年接受肾移植的4471名成年人。结局指标为10年内的移植物失败和功能状态。
非裔美国人和西班牙裔的移植物失败累积发生率高于白人(分别为77%、64%和60%;P<0.001),居住在最贫困地区的移植受者中移植物失败累积发生率也更高(最贫困地区为70%,最富裕地区为58%;P<0.001)。在多变量分析中,非裔美国人和西班牙裔的种族/族裔是移植物失败的独立预测因素(风险比分别为1.8,95%置信区间1.6 - 1.9;风险比1.3,95%置信区间1.2 - 1.6),但贫困状态不是(风险比1.0,95%置信区间0.9 - 1.1)。与白人相比,非裔美国人功能状态受损的天数更多(风险比1.6,95%置信区间1.3 - 1.9),但并非独立于贫困因素。贫困与功能状态受损独立相关(风险比1.3,95%置信区间1.0 - 1.6)。
在对贫困和其他协变量进行调整后,非裔美国人和西班牙裔的移植物失败率高于白人,而贫困而非种族/族裔与肾移植后的功能状态相关。国家数据集应纳入社会经济地位的个体层面测量指标,以改善对肾移植结局差异的社会和环境原因的评估。