Abstract

Transfer of follow-up care after pediatric kidney transplantation (KTx) may jeopardize quality of care and patient outcomes. We sought to determine if minority status and socioeconomic factors were associated with increased likelihood of follow-up outside a transplant center, and whether this transition of care was associated with worse long-term graft and patient survival. We performed an analysis of the United Network for Organ Sharing database, including children age < 18years who received a kidney transplant between 2003 and 2018. Survival analysis (conditional on survival with functioning graft to 1year) was performed using a Cox proportional hazards model where transfer of care (place of follow-up recorded as any setting other than a transplant center) was entered as a time-varying covariate. The study included 10,293, of whom 2083 received care outside of a transplant center during follow-up. Medicare coverage, but not minority race/ethnicity or socioeconomic status, was associated with increased likelihood of follow-up outside a transplant center. Follow-up outside a transplant center was associated with a 10% increased hazard of death or graft failure (hazard ratio: 1.10; 95% confidence interval: 1.004, 1.21; p = 0.041). Follow-up outside of a transplant center increased risk of poor outcomes, though the likelihood of receiving care outside a transplant center did not vary by race/ethnicity or socioeconomic status. Our results highlight the need to improve continuity of care after KTx and to further understand the mechanisms leading to poor survival rates among minority populations. A higher resolution version of the Graphical abstract is available as Supplementary information.

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