Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, Arizona, United States of America.
Department of Health Science Research, Section of Biostatistics, Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, Arizona, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Feb 3;16(2):e0244492. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0244492. eCollection 2021.
The objective is to assess cardiovascular (CV), malignancy, infectious, graft outcomes and tacrolimus levels for the Indigenous patients compared to Whites after kidney transplant (KTx).
165 Indigenous and 165 White patients matched for the KTx year at Mayo Clinic Arizona from 2007-2015 were studied over a median follow-up of 3 years. Propensity score was calculated to account for baseline differences.
Compared to Whites, Indigenous patients had the following characteristics: younger age, more obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and required dialysis prior to KTx (p<0.01). Indigenous patients had longer hospital stay for KTx, shorter follow-up and lived further from the transplant center (p<0.05). 210 (63.6%) received deceased donor KTx and more Whites received a living donor KTx compared to Indigenous patients (55.2% vs 17.6%, p<0.0001). Post-KTx, there was no difference in the CV event rates. The cumulative incidence of infectious complications was higher among the Indigenous patients (HR 1.81, p = 0.0005, 48.5% vs 38.2%, p = 0.013), with urinary causes as the most common. Malignancy rates were increased among Whites (13.3% vs 3.0%, p = 0.001) with skin cancer being the most common. There was a significant increase in the dose normalized tacrolimus level for the Indigenous patients compared to Whites at 1 months, 3 months, and 1 year post-KTx. After adjustment for the propensity score, there was no statistical difference in infectious or graft outcomes between the two groups but the mean number of emergency room visits and hospitalizations after KTx was significantly higher for Whites compared to Indigenous patients.
Compared to Whites, Indigenous patients have similar CV events, graft outcomes and infectious complications after accounting for baseline differences.
本研究旨在评估与白人患者相比,接受肾移植(KTx)后的原住民患者的心血管(CV)、恶性肿瘤、感染、移植物结局和他克莫司水平。
在亚利桑那州梅奥诊所,对 2007 年至 2015 年期间与白人患者 KTx 年份相匹配的 165 名原住民和 165 名白人患者进行了中位随访 3 年的研究。通过计算倾向评分来解释基线差异。
与白人患者相比,原住民患者具有以下特征:年龄较小、更多肥胖、糖尿病、高血压,以及在 KTx 前需要透析(p<0.01)。原住民患者的 KTx 住院时间更长,随访时间更短,且距离移植中心更远(p<0.05)。210 名患者(63.6%)接受了已故供体 KTx,与原住民患者相比,更多的白人患者接受了活体供体 KTx(55.2%对 17.6%,p<0.0001)。KTx 后,CV 事件发生率无差异。原住民患者的感染并发症累积发生率较高(HR 1.81,p=0.0005,48.5%对 38.2%,p=0.013),其中以尿路感染最为常见。白人患者的恶性肿瘤发病率较高(13.3%对 3.0%,p=0.001),其中皮肤癌最为常见。与白人患者相比,KTx 后 1 个月、3 个月和 1 年,原住民患者的他克莫司剂量归一化水平显著升高。在调整倾向评分后,两组间感染或移植物结局无统计学差异,但 KTx 后白人患者急诊就诊和住院的平均次数明显高于原住民患者。
在考虑到基线差异后,与白人患者相比,原住民患者的 CV 事件、移植物结局和感染并发症相似。