Abstract
The impact of increasing body mass index (BMI) on development and progression of chronic kidney disease is established. Even implantation kidney biopsies from obese living donors demonstrate subtle histologic changes despite normal function. We hypothesized that kidneys from obese living (LD) and deceased donors (DD) would have inferior long-term allograft outcomes. In a study utilizing US transplant registry, we studied adult kidney transplant recipients from 2000 to 2014. Donors were categorized as BMI <20 (underweight), 20-25 (normal), 25-30 (overweight), 30-35 (mildly obese), and >35kg/m2 (very obese). Our outcome of interest was death censored graft failure (DCGF). Cox proportional hazards model were fitted separately for recipients of DD and LD kidneys, and adjusted for donor, recipient, and transplant characteristics, including donor and recipient size mismatch ratio. Among 118734 DD and 84377 LD transplants recipients, we observed a significant and graded increase in DCGF risk among the overweight (LD:HR=1.06, DD:HR=1.04), mildly obese (LD:HR=1.16, DD:HR=1.10), and very obese (LD:HR=1.22, DD:HR=1.22) compared to normal BMI (P<0.05). The graded effect of donor BMI on outcomes begins early and persists throughout the post-transplant period. Donor obesity status is an independent risk factor for inferior long-term renal allograft outcome despite adjusting for donor and recipient size mismatch and other donor, recipient, and transplant factors.
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