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Living Donor Kidney Transplantation: Opportunities and Challenges

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Title: Living Donor Kidney Transplantation: Opportunities and Challenges


1
Living Donor Kidney Transplantation
Opportunities and Challenges
  • Robert Montgomery, MD
  • Associate Professor of Surgery
  • Director of the Incompatible Kidney Transplant
    Program
  • Chief of the Division of Transplantation
  • Director of the Comprehensive Transplant Center
  • John Hopkins University and Hospital

2
Renal Transplantation in the United States,
1990-2003
Candidates on waiting list, deaths on waiting
list, and transplants by donor type
60,000
50,000
40,000
Number of patients
30,000
20,000
10,000
0
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
Year
Based on OPTN data as of October 8, 2004.
www.optn.org
3
Cadaveric vs. Live Donor
  • Shorter waiting period and hospitalization
  • Preemptive transplant
  • Optimize medical status of recipient
  • Better HLA matching
  • Shorter cold ischemic times
  • No brain death injury to organ
  • Lower incidence of DGF and rejection
  • Superior graft and patient survival

4
Time on Dialysis Strongest Modifiable Risk
Factor for Renal Transplant Outcome
Meier-Kriesche H, Kaplan B. Transplantation
74,13772002
5
Timeline for Expansion of Live Donation
  • 1954 Identical Twins
  • 1962 Living Related
  • 1990 Living Unrelated/Emotionally Related
  • 1995 Laparoscopic Donor Nephrectomy
  • 1998 Positive Crossmatch/ABO Incompatible
  • 1999 Nondirected Donation
  • 2000 Kidney Paired Donation

6
Changes in Types of Kidney Donors
7
Risks of Living Kidney Donation
  • Mortality 1/3000
  • Major complications 1/500
  • Chronic kidney disease 1/500
  • Increase in BP approx 5mm/hg

.In view of the available evidence,
living donor kidney transplantation is reasonably
safe, reliable, and effective.
Nguyen et al. Lancet 200736987.
8
Living Kidney Donors Listed For Renal
Transplantation
  • 56 previous donors listed at UNOS
  • Over a total of 35 years (20 since 1987)
  • Out of 48,000 since 1987 (0.04)
  • 86 siblings

9
Psychosocial Health of Living Kidney Donors
  • 5,139 donors in 51 studies 4 years post-op
  • Anxiety and depression uncommon (5-20)
  • Stable or improved relationships (82-100)
  • Increased self esteem
  • No change in attractiveness (83-93)
  • Most scored high on QoL measures
  • Most report improved psychosocial health

Clemens et al. Am J Transplant 200662965.
10
The Laproscopic Donor Nephrectomy
12 mm
12 mm
5 cm
5 mm
11
Laparoscopic Live Donor Nephrectomy Goals
  • Reduce disincentives to donation
  • Decreased length of stay
  • Shorter convalescence
  • Less invasive operation
  • Less pain
  • Less morbidity
  • Favorable cosmetic result

12
Trends in Complications Hopkins Experience

13
Donor Nephrectomy in the U.S. 1999-2001
Matas et al. Am J Transplantation, 2003
14
Barriers to Expansion of LDRT
  • 30 of DD list is sensitized
  • Patients become sensitized from exposure to
    disparate HLA due to pregnancies, transfusions,
    or transplants
  • About 7000 patients on DD list are highly
    sensitized (PRA gt 80)
  • Highly sensitized patients on average wait twice
    as long as unsensitized patients for a DD organ
  • Very broadly sensitized patients may not ever
    receive an organ offer
  • Several thousand of these patient have willing
    living donors who are excluded due to a () XM

15
Barriers to Expansion of LDRT
  • Based on blood group frequencies in the USA,
    there is a 35 chance that any 2 individuals will
    be ABO incompatible
  • Up to 1/3 of potential live donors are excluded
    on the basis of ABO incompatibility
  • This translates into lost opportunities for many
    patients with willing donors
  • Blood type incompatible recipients have natural
    occurring antibodies against carbohydrate
    epitopes on disparate blood group molecules which
    can result in hyperacute rejection

16
Patients with Incompatible Donors
  • Confront the incompatibility directly
  • Desensitization Plasmapheresis/IVIg
  • Montgomery et al. Transplantation 2000
    70(6)887.
  • Gloor et al. Am J Transplant 2003 31017.
  • Avoid the incompatibility
  • Kidney or domino paired donation (KPD or DPD)
  • Montgomery et al. JAMA 2005 2941655.
  • Montgomery et al. Lancet 2006 368 419.
  • Lessen the incompatibility
  • KPD or DPD followed by desensitization
  • Montgomery et al. JAMA 2005 2941655.

17
Assessing Risk and Difficulty of a () XM Tx
  • Factors Determining Degree of Difficulty of Ab
    Removal
  • DSA Titer of plasmapheresis treatments to
    arrive at a safe level for transplantation
  • Factors Contributing to Immunologic Risk
  • Breadth of anti-HLA Ab--estimated by (PRA)
  • of previous transplants
  • Previous early graft losses
  • of repeat mismatches
  • Multiple sensitizing events--Ab response to each
  • High risk donor/recipient combination
  • IVIg nonresponder
  • High titer DSA

18
Assessing Difficulty and Risk of ABOi Transplant
Between a Donor and Recipient
  • Factors determining degree of difficulty
  • Isohemagglutinin Titer of plasmapheresis
    treatments to get to a titer of 16
  • Factors contributing to immunologic risk
  • Donor blood type (risk for A1 gt B gt A2)
  • High Isoagglutinin titer
  • History of sensitization, previous transplant,
    high risk donor/recipient pair

19
Matching Donor/Recipient Pair to Transplant
Modality
  • Easy-to-match pair
  • O donor
  • A/B, B/A
  • Low PRA
  • Difficult-to-desensitize
  • A1 donor
  • High titer DSA
  • High immunologic risk
  • Difficult-to-match pair
  • AB donor
  • A/O
  • Broad Sensitization
  • Easy-to-desensitize
  • B or A2 donor
  • Low titer DSA
  • Low immunologic risk

20
Matching Donor/Recipient Pair to Transplant
Modality
  • KPD/DPD followed by desensitization
  • Difficult-to-match pair
  • AB donor
  • A/O
  • Broad Sensitization
  • Difficult-to-desensitize
  • High immunologic risk
  • A1 donor
  • High titer DSA

21
Kidney Paired Donation
  • The goal of pairing is to eliminate the
    incompatibility for all parties in the exchange
  • Conventional PD involves exchanges between A/B
    and B/A pairs. This is the rarest blood type
    combination and only effects 3 of patients
  • The concept of the unconventional KPD greatly
    expands the value of matching through the
    participation of blood type O patients
  • Likelihood of finding a match pair is substrate
    dependent the larger the pool, the more likely
    the match

22
Kidney Paired Donation
Conventional- only ABO I pairs A/B or B/A (lt3 of
donor/recipient pairs eligible)
Donor
Recipient
A
B
B
A
23
Kidney Paired Donation
Unconventional (all ABOI and XM
donor/recipient pairs eligible)
Donor
Recipient
O
24
Desensitization afterKidney Paired Donation
  • In cases where patients are difficult-to-match
    (broadly sensitized or undesirable blood types)
    and not thought to be good candidates for
    desensitization, relaxing restrictions for a (-)
    XM and ABOc can generate matches that are a lower
    immunologic risk
  • The goal is not to find a blood type compatible
    or (-) XM pairing but rather to find a better
    donor

25
Triple Exchange With () XM Only
Donor
Recipient
O
Pair 1
A
XM gt1024
XM titer 4
O
Pair 2
O
XM gt1024
-XM
XM gt1024
-XM
Pair 3
O
O
26
Domino Paired Donation
Donor 1 NDD
Incompatible
Donor 2
Recipient 1
Recipient 2
1st eligible recipient From UNOS match run
Montgomery et al. Lancet. 2006368419.
27
DPD After Desensitization
Donor
Recipient
ND Donor
AB
- cyto XM, Anti-AB titer 64
XM, PRA
O
Pair 1
O
A
O
Pair 2
ABOi
ABOc
-cyto XM
Wait List
A
PRA
28
Hopkins Single Center Experience
  • 145 patients transplanted through KPD in the US
    (UNOS 1/12/07)
  • 43 patients transplanted
  • Conventional 6 x 2-way
  • Unconventional 5 x 2-way, 2 x 3-way
  • Domino 2 x 2-way, 2 x 3-way, 1 x 5-way
  • 1 graft loss
  • 2 deaths with functioning grafts
  • 1 heart and 1 pulmonary failure

Montgomery et al. JAMA 2005.
29
Desensitization for () XM
Anti-CD20 Splenectomy
FK 506 MMF
Steroids Daclizumab
Anti-CD20
Tx
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
-6
-7
-8
-9
-10
-40
Time in days
30
Johns Hopkins ABOi Transplantation Protocol
Overview
Anti-CD20 And/or Splenectomy
FK 506 MMF
Steroids Daclizumab
Tx
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
PP/Ig
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
-6
-7
-8
-9
-10
8
7
Time in days
lt116
116
1128
31
Goals of Preconditioning for Incompatible Kidney
Engraftment
  • Pre-transplant plasmapheresis (PP) and IVIg
  • PP reduces DSA titer to a level in which
    hyperacute
  • rejection is unlikely to occur.
  • Low dose IVIg suppresses endogenous Ab synthesis
    and may have some immunomodulatory activity.
  • Post-transplant PP and IVIg
  • PP prevents rebound, maintaining DSA at a safe
    level until tolerance or accommodation occurs.
  • IVIg repletes antibody lost from PP and may have
    some role in tolerance/accommodation

32
Goals of Preconditioning for Incompatible Kidney
Engraftment
  • B-cell ablative therapy
  • Splenectomy reduces plasma cell burden, precursor
    cells, B-cell immune surveillance capabilities
  • Anti-CD20 rapidly depletes the peripheral B-cell
    compartment but not plasma cells
  • Induction
  • Agents like ATG and anti-IL-2 receptor Ab reduce
    T-cell responsiveness and T-cell help
  • Maintenance immunosuppression
  • Fk 506, Rapamycin, MMF/DSG, and steroids, reduce
    the risk of cellular rejection and some have
    anti-B-cell properties

33
The Effect of Anti-CD20 on B-cell Expression in
Spleen
CD20
CD20
Normal Spleen
1 Week After Anti-CD20
34
Death-censored Graft Survival 1yr 3yr 5yr
n ABOi 97.7 94.3 87.1 50 XM 85.6 84.1 81.1 13
8 XM/ABOi 100 100 - 10
35
New Registrants 3584/yr
ABOi and XM () 6000
Matched 47 or 2820
Unmatched 53 or 3180
Tx
List Donation 3180
Desensitization 2940
KPD for Better Match
Tx
Tx 4 or 240
Montgomery et al. Transplantation. 200682164.
Segev et al. Am J Transplant. 2005 51914.
36
Transplantation TourismThe Canadian Experience
11 of 20 patients had serious post-transplant
opportunistic infection
Ramesh P et al Transplantation 2006821130.
37
An Australian Perspective
  • Outcome of commercial kidney transplantation 16
    patients
  • 2 HBVdeath
  • 3 serious CMV
  • 1 aspergillus death
  • Poor patient and graft survival
  • High incidence of infection in literature review

Kennedy et al. MJA 2005182224..
38
A Call for Action
  • Why we should develop a regulated system of organ
    sales
  • Payment by government or insurance
  • Fixed sum (50,000?)/insurance/tax breaks
  • Allocation per UNOS algorithm
  • Evaluation/consent/oversight/follow-up
  • Limit to fixed geographic areas
  • Treat donor with dignity

Matas A. CJASN 200611129
39
Iranian Model
  • Paid and regulated living-unrelated kidney
    donation
  • Approx 20,000 performed
  • Kidney waiting list eliminated
  • Award (1200)/Insurance/Gift
  • No brokers
  • 84 of donors are poor
  • Long term dissatisfaction of some donors

Ghods A. CJASN 200611136
40
Summary and Conclusions
  • The deceased donor list continues to grow at an
    alarming pace
  • Live donation is the area where expansion is most
    likely to occur
  • Live kidney donation is safe and can be done
    using minimally invasive techniques, reducing the
    disincentives to donation
  • HLA and ABO incompatibilities are the most
    significant barriers to further expansion of live
    donation

41
Summary and Conclusions
  • KPD and DPD are the most effective method of
    managing patients with incompatible live donors
    and could eliminate the need for desensitization
    in over 50 of patients
  • Excellent results can be achieved through
    desensitization of () XM and ABOi patients
  • Organ vending is receiving a lot of attention in
    the lay press as well as the transplant community
    as a possible solution to the crisis
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