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Reducing Travel while Improving Geographic Equity: Continuous Distribution with "Gravity Functions" [Meeting Abstract]

Mankowski, Michal; Wood, Nicholas; Segev, Dorry; Gentry, Sommer
ISI:000505634300150
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 5456172

RACIAL, INCOME-, AND EDUCATION-BASED DISPARITIES IN ACCESS TO RENAL TRANSPLANTATION IN BRAZIL [Meeting Abstract]

Ferreira, Gustavo; Saha, Amrita; Yu, Yifan; Colares, Vinicius; Bastos, Juliana; Henderson, Macey; Segev, Dorry; Massie, Allan
ISI:000618872100152
ISSN: 0041-1337
CID: 5480902

mKidney (R) System: A Novel Mobile Health Platform to Improve Living Kidney Donor Care Management [Meeting Abstract]

Sidoti, Carolyn; Thomas, Alvin; Waldram, Madeleine; Levan, Michael; Massie, Allan; Bingman, Adam; Segev, Dorry; Henderson, Macey
ISI:000505634300181
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 5480862

Socioeconomic Determinants of Access to Renal Transplantation in Brazil [Meeting Abstract]

Saha, Amrita; Yu, Yifan; Bastos, Juliana; Colares, Vinicius; Henderson, Macey; Segev, Dorry; Massie, Allan; Ferreira, Gustavo
ISI:000505634300125
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 5480852

Mobile Directly Observed Therapy for Immunosuppression Medication Adherence in Kidney Transplant Patients [Meeting Abstract]

Saha, Amrita; Langlee, Julie; Lees, Laura; Brown, Allison; Motter, Jennifer; Sung, Hannah; Massie, Allan; Segev, Dorry; Brennan, Daniel; Henderson, Macey
ISI:000505634300124
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 5480842

The Scope and Limitations of Public Education Materials about Vascular Composite Allotransplantation and Donation in the United States [Meeting Abstract]

Rasmussen, Sarah; Henderson, Macey; Uriarte, Jefferson; Anderson, Naomi; Doby, Brianna; Cooney, Carisa; Segev, Dorry; Brandacher, Gerald; Gordon, Elisa
ISI:000505634300123
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 5480832

Association Between Liver Transplant Wait-list Mortality and Frailty Based on Body Mass Index

Haugen, Christine E; McAdams-DeMarco, Mara; Verna, Elizabeth C; Rahimi, Robert S; Kappus, Matthew R; Dunn, Michael A; Volk, Michael L; Gurakar, Ahmet; Duarte-Rojo, Andres; Ganger, Daniel R; O'Leary, Jacqueline G; Ladner, Daniela; Garonzik-Wang, Jacqueline; Segev, Dorry L; Lai, Jennifer C
Importance:Among liver transplant candidates, obesity and frailty are associated with increased risk of death while they are on the wait-list. However, use of body mass index (BMI) may not detect candidates at a higher risk of death owing to the fact that ascites and muscle wasting are seen across transplant candidates of all BMI measurements. Objective:To evaluate whether the association between wait-list mortality and frailty varied by BMI of liver transplant candidates. Design, Setting, and Participants:A prospective cohort study was conducted at 9 liver transplant centers in the United States from March 1, 2012, to May 1, 2018, among 1108 adult liver transplant candidates without hepatocellular carcinoma. Exposures:At outpatient evaluation, the Liver Frailty Index score was calculated (grip strength, chair stands, and balance), with frailty defined as a Liver Frailty Index score of 4.5 or more. Candidates' BMI was categorized as nonobese (18.5-29.9), class 1 obesity (30.0-34.9), and class 2 or greater obesity (≥35.0). Main Outcomes and Measures:The risk of wait-list mortality was quantified using competing risks regression by candidate frailty, adjusting for age, sex, race/ethnicity, Model for End-stage Liver Disease Sodium score, cause of liver disease, and ascites, including an interaction with candidate BMI. Results:Of 1108 liver transplant candidates (474 women and 634 men; mean [SD] age, 55 [10] years), 290 (26.2%) were frail; 170 of 670 nonobese candidates (25.4%), 64 of 246 candidates with class 1 obesity (26.0%), and 56 of 192 candidates with class 2 or greater obesity (29.2%) were frail (P = .57). Frail nonobese candidates and frail candidates with class 1 obesity had a higher risk of wait-list mortality compared with their nonfrail counterparts (nonobese candidates: adjusted subhazard ratio, 1.54; 95% CI, 1.02-2.33; P = .04; and candidates with class 1 obesity: adjusted subhazard ratio, 1.72; 95% CI, 0.99-2.99; P = .06; P = .75 for interaction). However, frail candidates with class 2 or greater obesity had a 3.19-fold higher adjusted risk of wait-list mortality compared with nonfrail candidates with class 2 or greater obesity (95% CI, 1.75-5.82; P < .001; P = .047 for interaction). Conclusions and Relevance:This study's finding suggest that among nonobese liver transplant candidates and candidates with class 1 obesity, frailty was associated with a 2-fold higher risk of wait-list mortality. However, the mortality risk associated with frailty differed for candidates with class 2 or greater obesity, with frail candidates having a more than 3-fold higher risk of wait-list mortality compared with nonfrail patients. Frailty assessments may help to identify vulnerable patients, particularly those with a BMI of 35.0 or more, in whom a clinician's visual evaluation may be less reliable to assess muscle mass and nutritional status.
PMID: 31509169
ISSN: 2168-6262
CID: 5129662

Management of Thyroid Nodules in Deceased Donors With Comparison Between Fine Needle Aspiration and Intraoperative Frozen Section in the Setting of Transplantation

Eccher, Albino; Girolami, Ilaria; D'Errico, Antonia; Zaza, Gianluigi; Carraro, Amedeo; Montin, Umberto; Boggi, Ugo; Scarpa, Aldo; Brunelli, Matteo; Martignoni, Guido; Segev, Dorry; Rossi, Esther Diana; Pantanowitz, Liron
INTRODUCTION:Newly discovered thyroid nodules in deceased donors are investigated to rule out cancer that can be transmitted, but there are no established protocols. The aim of the study was to compare fine needle aspiration versus intraoperative frozen section in the donor management with limited time. METHODS:Data were extracted only from the records of Italian second opinion consultation service in the years 2016 to 2017 and included donor details, pathology diagnoses, complications, transmission risk profile, and impact on transplantation. RESULTS:Among 31 deceased donors with thyroid nodules, we documented 4 with a clinical history of cancer and 27 with a newly discovered nodule. The latter was evaluated by thyroidectomy with frozen section in 22 and fine needle aspiration in 5. Among all donors, 7 had papillary thyroid carcinoma with negligible transmission risk, whereas 8 with unacceptable risk. Two donors presented major bleeding after thyroidectomy, with organ discard in 1 case. Transplantation was delayed in 4 cases that were evaluated with frozen section. DISCUSSION:There was no uniform approach for the investigation of thyroid nodules. Our results showed that fine needle aspiration was more accurate and useful than frozen section. Fine needle aspiration had minor economic impact and a far less rate of bleeding/hemodynamic complications, potentially delaying and compromising organ recovery. Our results suggested considering fine needle aspiration as a first step in the evaluation of thyroid nodules in donors.
PMID: 31711391
ISSN: 2164-6708
CID: 5129732

Outcomes After Declining Increased Infectious Risk Kidney Offers for Pediatric Candidates in the United States

Bowring, Mary G; Jackson, Kyle R; Wasik, Heather; Neu, Alicia; Garonzik-Wang, Jacqueline; Durand, Christine; Desai, Niraj; Massie, Allan B; Segev, Dorry L
BACKGROUND:Kidneys from infectious risk donors (IRD) confer substantial survival benefit in adults, yet the benefit of IRD kidneys to pediatric candidates remains unclear in the context of high waitlist prioritization. METHODS:Using 2010-2016 Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients data, we studied 2417 pediatric candidates (age <18 y) who were offered an IRD kidney that was eventually used for transplantation. We followed candidates from the date of first IRD kidney offer until the date of death or censorship and used Cox regression to estimate mortality risk associated with IRD kidney acceptance versus decline, adjusting for age, sex, race, diagnosis, and dialysis time. RESULTS:Over the study period, 2250 (93.1%) pediatric candidates declined and 286 (11.8%) accepted an IRD kidney offer; 119 (41.6%) of the 286 had previously declined a different IRD kidney. Cumulative survival among those who accepted versus declined the IRD kidney was 99.6% versus 99.4% and 96.3% versus 97.8% 1 and 6 years post decision, respectively (P = 0.1). Unlike the substantial survival benefit seen in adults (hazard ratio = 0.52), among pediatric candidates, we did not detect a survival benefit associated with accepting an IRD kidney (adjusted hazard ratio: 0.791.723.73, P = 0.2). However, those who declined IRD kidneys waited a median 9.6 months for a non-IRD kidney transplant (11.2 mo among those <6 y, 8.8 mo among those on dialysis). Kidney donor profile index (KDPI) of the eventually accepted non-IRD kidneys (median = 13, interquartile range = 6-23) was similar to KDPI of the declined IRD kidneys (median = 16, interquartile range = 9-28). CONCLUSIONS:Unlike in adults, IRD kidneys conferred no survival benefit to pediatric candidates, although they did reduce waiting times. The decision to accept IRD kidneys should balance the advantage of faster transplantation against the risk of infectious transmission.
PMCID:6690800
PMID: 30801530
ISSN: 1534-6080
CID: 5129282

Prescription opioid use before and after heart transplant: Associations with posttransplant outcomes

Lentine, Krista L; Shah, Kevin S; Kobashigawa, Jon A; Xiao, Huiling; Zhang, Zidong; Axelrod, David A; Lam, Ngan N; Segev, Dorry L; McAdams-DeMarco, Mara Ann; Randall, Henry; Hess, Gregory P; Yuan, Hui; Vest, Luke S; Kasiske, Bertram L; Schnitzler, Mark A
Impacts of the prescription opioid epidemic have not yet been examined in the context of heart transplantation. We examined a novel database in which national U.S. transplant registry records were linked to a large pharmaceutical claims warehouse (2007-2016) to characterize prescription opioid use before and after heart transplant, and associations (adjusted hazard ratio, 95% LCL aHR95% UCL ) with death and graft loss. Among 13 958 eligible patients, 40% filled opioids in the year before transplant. Use was more common among recipients who were female, white, or unemployed, or who underwent transplant in more recent years. Of those with the highest level of pretransplant opioid use, 71% continued opioid use posttransplant. Pretransplant use had graded associations with 1-year posttransplant outcomes; compared with no use, the highest-level use (>1000 mg morphine equivalents) predicted 33% increased risk of death (aHR 1.10 1.331.61 ) in the year after transplant. Risk relationships with opioid use in the first year posttransplant were stronger, with highest level use predicting 70% higher mortality (aHR 1.46 1.701.98 ) over the subsequent 4 years (from >1 to 5 years posttransplant). While associations may, in part, reflect underlying conditions or behaviors, opioid use history is relevant in assessing and providing care to transplant candidates and recipients.
PMCID:6883129
PMID: 31397964
ISSN: 1600-6143
CID: 5129612