Increased mortality after kidney transplantation in mildly frail recipients
Increased mortality after kidney transplantation in mildly frail recipients
Citació
- Pérez-Sáez MJ, Arias-Cabrales CE, Redondo-Pachón D, Burballa C, Buxeda A, Bach A, et al. Increased mortality after kidney transplantation in mildly frail recipients. Clin Kidney J. 2022 Jun 23; 15(11): 2089-96. DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfac159
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Resum
Background: physical Frailty Phenotype (PFP) is the most used frailty instrument among kidney transplant recipients, classifying patients as pre-frail if they have 1-2 criteria and as frail if they have ≥3. However, different definitions of robustness have been used among renal patients, including only those who have 0 criteria, or those with 0-1 criteria. Our aim was to determine the impact of one PFP criterion on transplant outcomes. Methods: we undertook a retrospective study of 296 kidney transplant recipients who had been evaluated for frailty by PFP at the time of evaluating for transplantation. Results: only 30.4% of patients had 0 criteria, and an additional 42.9% showed one PFP criterion. As PFP score increased, a higher percentage of women and cerebrovascular disease were found. Recipients with 0-1 criteria had lower 1-year mortality after transplant than those with ≥2 (1.8% vs 10.1%), but this difference was already present when we only considered those who scored 0 (mortality 1.1%) and 1 (mortality 2.4%) separately. The multivariable analysis confirmed that one PFP criterion was associated to a higher risk of patient death after kidney transplantation [hazard ratio 3.52 (95% confidence interval 1.03-15.9)]. Conclusions: listed kidney transplant candidates frequently show only one PFP frailty criterion. This has an independent impact on patient survival after transplantation.Col·leccions
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