Fritz Kristina, Hong Jennifer, Basdeo Devina, Byrnes Kimberly, Cordoba Andres, Dunn Kylie, Haider Umbul, Kashif Mareena, Lee Nick, Mohamed Nuhuman Aysha S, Santos Radleigh, Jacobs Robin J
Medicine, Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine, Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, USA.
Mathematics, Nova Southeastern University, Davie, USA.
Cureus. 2023 Feb 6;15(2):e34679. doi: 10.7759/cureus.34679. eCollection 2023 Feb.
In the United States (U.S.), African Americans and other minority groups have longer wait times for kidney transplantation than Caucasians. To date, many studies analyzing time spent on the waitlist for each race/ethnicity have been done. However, there are few to no studies examining waitlist time after the 2019 policy changes to the geographic distribution of donated kidneys.
Data collected from the National Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network database were used to analyze associations between race and time spent on the waitlist for a kidney transplant in the U.S. Additional sub-categorical data were analyzed to determine further associations and potential covariates, such as gender, age, citizenship, primary source of payment, region of transplant center, BMI, Kidney Donor Profile Index (KDPI), renal diagnosis, and presence/type of diabetes. Data were analyzed using odds ratios and validated by Bonferroni-Holm's corrected chi-square tests at confidence intervals of 95% to determine if there are statistically significant differences between transplant time spent on the waitlist and ethnicity, as well as age, diagnosis category, region of transplant center, and KDPI.
Statistically significant increased odds of remaining on the transplant list at two years existed for all non-white races/ethnicities, except those identifying as multiracial. Asian American candidates had the greatest odds of remaining on the waitlist greater than two years in comparison to white candidates: 1.51 times that of a patient categorized as white (odds ratio [OR] 1.51, confidence interval [CI] 1.44-1.57). African American/Black, (OR 1.38, CI 1.34-1.43) Pacific Islander (OR 1.38, CI 1.17-1.63), Hispanic candidates (OR 1.37, CI 1.32-1.41), and American Indian or Native Alaskan candidates (OR 1.23, CI 1.12-1.46) also had increased odds of remaining on the transplant waitlist greater than two years compared to white candidates.
In this study, ethnic disparities persisted as a barrier for non-white individuals receiving treatment for end-stage kidney disease, specifically in the context of time spent on the waitlist for a kidney transplant. Further research is needed regarding the causes of these disparities in time spent on the waitlist, such as cultural restrictions in organ donation, racial differences in parameters for organ match, and institutionalized racism in health care practitioners.
在美国,非裔美国人和其他少数群体等待肾脏移植的时间比白种人更长。迄今为止,已经有许多研究分析了每个种族/族裔在等待名单上花费的时间。然而,在2019年捐赠肾脏地理分配政策变化之后,很少有研究(几乎没有)考察等待名单时间。
利用从国家器官采购和移植网络数据库收集的数据,分析美国种族与肾脏移植等待名单上花费时间之间的关联。分析额外的子分类数据以确定进一步的关联和潜在的协变量,如性别、年龄、公民身份、主要支付来源、移植中心所在地区、体重指数、肾脏捐赠者特征指数(KDPI)、肾脏诊断以及糖尿病的存在/类型。使用优势比分析数据,并通过Bonferroni-Holm校正卡方检验在95%的置信区间进行验证,以确定等待名单上的移植时间与种族、年龄、诊断类别、移植中心所在地区和KDPI之间是否存在统计学上的显著差异。
除了那些被认定为多种族的人之外,所有非白种人种族/族裔在两年时留在移植名单上的统计学显著增加的几率都存在。与白人候选人相比,亚裔美国候选人在等待名单上停留超过两年的几率最大:是被归类为白人患者的1.51倍(优势比[OR]1.51,置信区间[CI]1.44 - 1.57)。非裔美国人/黑人(OR 1.38,CI 1.34 - 1.43)、太平洋岛民(OR 1.38,CI 1.17 - 1.63)、西班牙裔候选人(OR 1.37,CI 1.32 - 1.41)以及美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民候选人(OR 1.23,CI 1.12 - 1.46)与白人候选人相比,在移植等待名单上停留超过两年的几率也有所增加。
在本研究中,种族差异仍然是接受终末期肾病治疗的非白人个体的一个障碍,特别是在肾脏移植等待名单上花费的时间方面。需要进一步研究等待名单上花费时间存在这些差异的原因,例如器官捐赠中的文化限制、器官匹配参数的种族差异以及医疗从业者中的制度化种族主义。