Second renal transplantations. Ethical issues clarified by outcome; outcome enhanced by a reliable crossmatch
F. L. Delmonico, N. Tolkoff-Rubin, H. Auchincloss Jr, M. L. Farrell, D. M. Fitzpatrick, S. Saidman, J. T. Herrin and A. B. Cosimi
Transplantation Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the appropriate use of scarce donor
resources has been accomplished by renal retransplantation by reviewing the
initial and long-term outcomes of second-renal transplant recipients at the
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. PATIENTS AND RESULTS: With a mean
follow-up of nearly 5 years following transplantation, 54 (68%) of 80
second-transplant recipients had functioning allografts (allograft failure
was defined by patient death or a return to dialysis). Rejection was the
most common cause of failure (14 [54%] of 26 patients). The 1-, 3-, and
5-year actuarial allograft survival rates were 86%, 78%, and 69%,
respectively, which were not significantly different from the survival
rates of primary allografts at this center. These results support the
continued approach of providing both cadaver-donor and living-donor renal
allografts for recipients whose primary renal allograft has failed. The
antiglobulin crossmatch may have contributed to the successful outcome by
accurately determining compatibility and by averting early rejection
failures. CONCLUSIONS: Health care policy reviewers should clearly
distinguish the prospects for successful second renal transplants from the
outcomes of extrarenal retransplantation. Moreover, because excellent
second-renal allograft survival is attainable and comparable to
primary-renal allograft survival and because the costs are comparable,
restricting suitable patients to subsequent lifelong dialysis becomes
unethical.