Abstract

Even in the modern era of kidney transplantation with improved surgical techniques, immunosuppression, and clinical care, HLA matching has been shown to be important in allograft survival in adults who receive an organ from either a deceased or living donor. We now explore the impact of genetic matching in pediatric first-kidney transplants. Using the United Network for Organ Sharing data, we identified 18 602 first pediatric (<18 years) kidney transplants between October 1, 1987, and December 31, 2016. Recipients were classified by number of HLA mismatches and donor origin. Cox proportional hazard analyses, adjusting for recipient and donor transplant covariates, were performed to study the impact of HLA on kidney allograft survival. For the fully adjusted Cox model there was a 30% increase in the hazard of allograft failure for 1 HLA mismatch, when compared with 0 mismatched recipients, and a 92% increase in risk for 6 mismatches. Although pediatric allografts from living donors survive as long or longer than those from deceased persons, they have a higher hazard of failure as a function of HLA mismatch. Kidney allografts from deceased donors HLA mismatched 0 to 3 were found to survive as long as organs from living donors HLA mismatched 4 to 6. In the full Cox model, there was a strong, linear effect on the hazard of allograft failure with quartile of age such that the youngest patients at age of transplant had the longest surviving grafts. HLA plays an important role in the survival of first pediatric kidney transplants. The better the match, and the earlier the transplant is performed in the child's life, the lower is the risk that the organ will fail.

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