Splenectomy in high-risk primary renal transplant recipients

1983 
Abstract One hundred sixty-five high-risk patients who were either 50 years of age or older or had diabetes mellitus, or both underwent primary renal transplantation. One hundred eight had splenectomy and 57 did not. Graft and patient survival were analyzed in regard to whether splenectomy had been performed at all and whether it had been performed 30 days or more before transplantation, less than 30 days before, or at the time of transplantation. Also, the influence of age, diabetes, blood transfusions, blood type, donor type, HLA mismatch, pretransplantation dialysis, and percentage of preformed antibodies were analyzed, as were complications and causes of death. Differences in patient survival were not significant in any one of these categories, although survival in the splenectomized group was generally better. The incidence of infection and sepsis was comparable in both groups and was responsible for death in 34 percent of the patients who underwent splenectomy compared with 22 percent of those who did not (no significant difference). Splenectomy improved cadaver donor renal allograft survival (p = 0.001) in the diabetic patients (p =0.015) and in those 50 years of age or older (p = 0.026) but it did not improve survival in those who received living related donor kidneys. No significant differences were detectable in regard to the timing of splenectomy. The effect of splenectomy was significant in the patients who had not received transfusions (p = 0.003). It also improved survival in the transfused patients. Splenectomy in high-risk diabetic patients and patients 50 years of age or older does not seem to be associated with increased mortality.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    30
    References
    7
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []