Donor rhabdomyolysis, acute kidney injury and kidney transplant outcomes

Background

Donor rhabdomyolysis may constrain kidney utilization due to anticipated unfavorable graft outcomes—especially in combination with acute kidney injury (AKI). There is a paucity of empiric data to inform organ acceptance decision-making.

Methods

A single-center retrospective cohort study of adult transplant recipients of deceased-donor kidneys with reported donor creatine phosphokinase (CPK) levels was conducted between 2014 and 2020. Recipients of CPK ≥ 1000 U/L kidneys were propensity matched to CPK < 1000 recipients according to outcome-predictive baseline covariates, except AKI.

Results

A total of 254 kidney transplants were propensity matched into CPK ≥ 1000 (n = 90) vs CPK<1000 (n = 90) groups. Transplant outcomes with high versus low CPK kidneys were similar in terms of delayed graft function (p = 0.64), 1-year estimated glomerular filtration rate <25th percentile (p = 0.69) and mean (p = 0.58), and time to all-cause graft failure (p = 0.58). There was no interaction between AKI and high CPK for these outcomes. Extreme CPK thresholds as high as >8672 U/L were not associated with overall graft survival in the unmatched sample (p = 0.81).

Conclusions

In a single center study, donor rhabdomyolysis was not associated with short-term kidney transplant graft outcomes, nor was there an additive effect of AKI. However, studies with greater CPK and AKI severity and longer follow-up are warranted.

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