Rashmi R Bharadwaj, Gabriel Orozco, Xiaonan Mei, Hanine El-Haddad, Roberto Gedaly, Meera Gupta
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
There is limited information on access and outcomes of patients living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) (PLWH) who have undergone pancreas transplantation. We conducted a retrospective cohort study analyzing data from the United Network for Organ Sharing from July 1, 2001, to June 30, 2021. Recipients of pancreas transplant were stratified by HIV serostatus. Graft and patient survival were analyzed using Kaplan-Meier product limit estimates. Multivariable Cox proportional hazard models were generated to identify factors associated with increased mortality or graft loss. Fifty PLWH and 16 380 patients without HIV underwent pancreas (with kidney) transplantation. PLWH were more often male (P < .001), Black/African American (P = .009), and on Medicare (P = .004). There were no significant differences in waiting time (P = .159) or proportion of patients treated for rejection within 1 year of transplant (P = .189) between groups. There were no differences in pancreas graft survival (P = .964) and overall patient survival (P = .250) between the cohorts. Dialysis status was negatively associated with graft survival. Although PLWH were more likely to represent a historically marginalized population, their outcomes after pancreas transplant were similar to their HIV-negative counterparts.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Transplantation is a leading journal in the field of transplantation. It serves as a forum for debate and reassessment, an agent of change, and a major platform for promoting understanding, improving results, and advancing science. Published monthly, it provides an essential resource for researchers and clinicians worldwide.
The journal publishes original articles, case reports, invited reviews, letters to the editor, critical reviews, news features, consensus documents, and guidelines over 12 issues a year. It covers all major subject areas in transplantation, including thoracic (heart, lung), abdominal (kidney, liver, pancreas, islets), tissue and stem cell transplantation, organ and tissue donation and preservation, tissue injury, repair, inflammation, and aging, histocompatibility, drugs and pharmacology, graft survival, and prevention of graft dysfunction and failure. It also explores ethical and social issues in the field.