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非白种人活体肾脏捐献者的健康结局:已知与未知。

Health outcomes among non-Caucasian living kidney donors: knowns and unknowns.

机构信息

Center for Outcomes Research, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO, USA.

出版信息

Transpl Int. 2013 Sep;26(9):853-64. doi: 10.1111/tri.12088. Epub 2013 Mar 27.

Abstract

The growth in living kidney donation has been accompanied by greater racial diversity. Most information on post-donation health comes from single-center studies of dominantly Caucasian cohorts. Recent linkage of U.S. donor registration data with death records demonstrated higher mortality risks among African American donors, but importantly, no differences in death compared with demographically matched, healthy controls. Within the donor population, some recent studies have also identified higher likelihoods of post-donation hypertension, diabetes mellitus and kidney failure in African American and Hispanic donors. Thus, based on concerns for higher risks of long-term end-organ damage, it may be reasonable to consider race within the living donor selection process, such as use of more stringent exclusion criteria among non-Caucasian living donors with baseline elevated blood pressure. Recently identified associations of coding variants in the apolipoprotein L1 (APOL1) gene with nondiabetic renal failure in African Americans raise promise of APOL1 genotyping as a novel tool for risk stratifying African American potential donors, but more data are needed to understand implications for post-donation outcomes. To tailor counseling and informed consent, focused attention to long-term medical outcomes among non-Caucasian living donors is needed, and should include assembly of healthy non-donor controls for assessment of attributable risks of donation.

摘要

活体肾脏捐献的增长伴随着更大的种族多样性。大多数关于捐赠后健康的信息来自以白种人为主的单中心队列研究。最近,美国捐赠者登记数据与死亡记录的链接表明,非裔美国捐赠者的死亡率风险更高,但重要的是,与人口统计学匹配的健康对照组相比,死亡率没有差异。在捐赠人群中,一些最近的研究还发现,非裔美国人和西班牙裔捐赠者在捐赠后更有可能出现高血压、糖尿病和肾衰竭。因此,基于对长期终末器官损害风险较高的担忧,在活体供者选择过程中考虑种族因素可能是合理的,例如在基线血压升高的非白种活体供者中使用更严格的排除标准。最近发现载脂蛋白 L1(APOL1)基因的编码变异与非糖尿病性肾衰竭在非裔美国人中的关联,为 APOL1 基因分型作为一种新型工具来对非裔美国潜在供者进行风险分层带来了希望,但需要更多的数据来了解对捐赠后结果的影响。为了量身定制咨询和知情同意,需要重点关注非白种活体供者的长期医疗结果,并且应该包括健康非供者对照组的评估,以评估捐赠的可归因风险。

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