From the Department of Nephrology, Dr. Soliman Fakeeh Hospital, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Exp Clin Transplant. 2020 Jan;18(Suppl 1):16-18. doi: 10.6002/ect.TOND-TDTD2019.L21.
Many factors affect organ donations worldwide, including religious factors, legislative decisions, economic factors, presence of organ procurement organizations, cultural issues, the presence of commercial transplant, and other unknown factors. The number of patients with end-stage renal disease has increased by 6% worldwide. Even with more transplant procedures, these numbers have not combated the dramatically increased number of patients on wait lists. With regard to potential living donors, around 50% are either blood group or HLA incompatible with the recipient, which then requires patient desensitization or paired kidney donation or a combination of both. Survival rates of kidney donors and the general population are almost the same 35 to 40 years after donation. Although the renal consequences of diabetes after kidney donation are almost the same as that shown in the general population, other risk factors should be considered, such as hypertension, proteinuria, and low glomerular filtration rate, before donation. It is so far unknown whether donors with impaired glucose tolerance can safely donate. With diabetes, what was considered normal blood sugar in 1960 to 1990 is now considered frank diabetes. What was considered normal blood pressure is now considered hypertension. Because individuals with these parameters were accepted as organ donors in the past and have been shown to maintain good health, it is worth considering the safe use of organs from donors with early diabetes and hypertension. Whereas young donors may have not reached the age at which hypertension, diabetes, and other kidney diseases develop, older donors have the lowest likelihood of developing end-stage renal disease after donation. As a general approach, young donors can be accepted if they have high glomerular filtration rate, but young donors from certain ethnic minorities and/or extensive family history of chronic kidney disease and those less than 18 years old should not be considered.
许多因素影响全球器官捐献,包括宗教因素、立法决策、经济因素、器官获取组织的存在、文化问题、商业移植的存在以及其他未知因素。全球终末期肾病患者增加了 6%。即使进行了更多的移植手术,这些数字也没有遏制等待名单上患者数量的急剧增加。对于潜在的活体供者,大约有 50%的供者与受者的血型或 HLA 不匹配,这就需要患者脱敏或配对肾脏捐献,或者两者结合。肾脏捐献者和一般人群的 35 到 40 年后的生存率几乎相同。尽管肾脏捐献后糖尿病的肾脏后果与一般人群中显示的几乎相同,但在捐赠前应考虑其他危险因素,如高血压、蛋白尿和肾小球滤过率低。目前还不知道糖耐量受损的供者是否可以安全捐献。有糖尿病的情况下,1960 年至 1990 年被认为是正常血糖的,现在被认为是典型的糖尿病。现在被认为是正常血压的,现在被认为是高血压。由于过去接受过这些参数的个体作为器官捐献者,并被证明保持良好的健康,因此值得考虑安全使用早期糖尿病和高血压供者的器官。虽然年轻的供者可能还没有达到高血压、糖尿病和其他肾脏疾病发展的年龄,但老年供者在捐赠后发生终末期肾病的可能性最低。作为一般方法,如果年轻的供者具有高的肾小球滤过率,则可以接受,但来自某些少数民族和/或慢性肾脏病广泛家族史的年轻供者和年龄小于 18 岁的供者不应被考虑。