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1.
Clin Transpl ; : 99-110, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22755406

RESUMO

The activity of kidney transplantation at Policlinico University Hospital, now the Ca' Granda Foundation, was established by Professor Edmondo Malan, who performed the first deceased donor transplantation in Milan, Italy, in 1969. Since then, 2989 kidney transplant procedures (2760 first, 219 second, 10 third transplants) have been performed through the end of November 2011, 2617 of them coming from deceased donors and 372 from living donors. Patient and graft survival have increased since the introduction of cyclosporine and tacrolimus in the last 28 years: 323 living donor-recipients under calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) show patient survival of 95.4% at five years and 88% at 10 years, not significantly different when compared with those of 1968 deceased donor-recipients (93.5% and 86.2%, respectively, at the same time points). Crude graft survival for living donor-recipients under CNI is 84.2% at 5 years and 70.2% at 10 years, not significantly different from those of deceased donor-recipients (80.3% and 64.3% for at the same time points). Actuarial graft survival censored by death is 87.2% at 5 years and 76.5% at 10 years for living donor-recipients vs. 84.4% and 72.2% for deceased donor-recipients, respectively. Previously unacceptable living or deceased kidneys are now successfully transplanted after being repaired with microsurgical techniques at bench. The rate of donors over 60 years of age has increased from 3.8% in the period of 1983-1995 to 20.8% in the last 15 years. It is interesting to note that 306 older kidneys (living donor, deceased donor, first, second, third transplants, with mean donor age of 64.6 +/- 4.0 yrs. and range 60-77 yrs.), always transplanted singularly, have similar behavior if compared with organs coming from donors aging 11-49 years. Survival rates are 93.1%, 90.1%, 88.4%, and 73.2% at 1, 3, 5, and 10 years post-transplant for the older donor grafts vs. 91.2%, 88.1%, 85.4%, and 74.4% for the younger donor grafts at the same time points. Perhaps the practice of dual transplant should be revisited and reserved to very old and ECD-donors. An open subcostal mini-incision (MINI) has been utilized in 177 living donors since 1996. This technique offers the same advantages of hand assisted videolaparoscopic technique, no disadvantages, and no major complications. Although more older and unrelated living donors are included in the MINI-group, very good results are obtained in these recipients, with graft survival censored by death of 97.2%, 95.3%, 93.8%, and 86.3% at 1, 3, 5, and 10 years post-transplant.


Assuntos
Hospitais Universitários , Transplante de Rim/tendências , Doadores de Tecidos/provisão & distribuição , Adolescente , Adulto , Fatores Etários , Idoso , Criança , Seleção do Doador/tendências , Feminino , Rejeição de Enxerto/imunologia , Rejeição de Enxerto/prevenção & controle , Sobrevivência de Enxerto , Humanos , Imunossupressores/uso terapêutico , Itália , Estimativa de Kaplan-Meier , Transplante de Rim/efeitos adversos , Transplante de Rim/imunologia , Transplante de Rim/mortalidade , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Avaliação de Programas e Projetos de Saúde , Medição de Risco , Fatores de Risco , Fatores de Tempo , Obtenção de Tecidos e Órgãos/tendências , Resultado do Tratamento , Adulto Jovem
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