Frailty and delayed graft function in kidney transplant recipients |
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Authors: | Garonzik-Wang Jacqueline M Govindan Priyanka Grinnan Jack W Liu Minghao Ali Hassan M Chakraborty Anindita Jain Vaibhav Ros Reside L James Nathan T Kucirka Lauren M Hall Erin C Berger Jonathan C Montgomery Robert A Desai Niraj M Dagher Nabil N Sonnenday Christopher J Englesbe Michael J Makary Martin A Walston Jeremy D Segev Dorry L |
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Affiliation: | Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA. |
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Abstract: | The ability to predict outcomes following a kidney transplant is limited by the complex physiologic decline of kidney failure, a latent factor that is difficult to capture using conventional comorbidity assessment. The frailty phenotype is a recently described inflammatory state of increased vulnerability to stressors resulting from decreased physiologic reserve and dysregulation of multiple physiologic systems. We hypothesized that frailty would be associated with delayed graft function, based on putative associations between inflammatory cytokines and graft dysfunction. We prospectively measured frailty in 183 kidney transplant recipients between December 2008 and April 2010. Independent associations between frailty and delayed graft function were analyzed using modified Poisson regression. Preoperative frailty was independently associated with a 1.94-fold increased risk for delayed graft function (95% CI, 1.13-3.36; P = .02). The assessment of frailty may provide further insights into the pathophysiology of allograft dysfunction and may improve our ability to preoperatively risk-stratify kidney transplant recipients. |
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