Abstract
In Brazil, organ transplantation has been regulated by a federal law since 1997. This law was created to guarantee equal access to treatment on a national scale. Deceased donor organ procurement and sharing are centralized and controlled by the Health Department of each state of the nation, following a regional allocation policy. In São Paulo, time on the waiting list was the main criterion adopted to allocate deceased donor kidneys up to January 1, 2002. After that, HLA mismatches (MM) were the main criterion. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of HLA compatibility on graft survival among 3312 consecutive kidney recipients. The 2-year kidney graft survival rates were compared among recipients transplanted based on the waiting time policy and based on HLA MM. Better results were observed in the HLA MM group (78.1% vs 64.9%; P < .0001). Regarding kidney allocation based on HLA MM, recipients transplanted with 0 HLA-A, -B, or -DR MM showed significantly better 5-year survival rates than those with 1–2 or 3–4 or 5–6 HLA-A, -B, or -DR MM (70.36% vs 64.71% vs 58.07% vs 55.64%; P < .050). We concluded that HLA compatibility is a feasible criterion to allocate deceased donor kidneys in Brazil.
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