Expanded Criteria Donors

Exp Clin Transplant. 2022 Aug;20(Suppl 4):13-19. doi: 10.6002/ect.DonorSymp.2022.L13.

Abstract

The expanded criteria donor is any donor over the age of 60 years or a donor over the age of 50 years with 2 of the following 3 items: (1) history of high blood pressure, (2) serum creatinine ≥1.5 mg/dL, and (3) death due to stroke. To accept an expanded criteria donor kidney may significantly decrease the amount of time a person waits for transplant but requires written informed consent from the recipient. Although expanded criteria donor kidneys have predictably shorter outcomes than standard criteria donors, the exact risk is unknown. At 5 years follow-up, 50% of expanded criteria donor kidneys are still working. Regardless of donor status of these kidneys as expanded criteria or standard criteria, the transplant recipients have higher survival rates compared with candidates who remain on the wait list. The success rate may be increased when a perfusion pump is used to preserve the kidneys. Sometimes the function of a single kidney from an expanded criteria donor is deemed insufficient. In this situation, a pair of marginally functioning kidneys may be transplanted as a dual-kidney transplant. This dual transplant option offers acceptable outcomes as good as a single-kidney transplant with normal function and can effectively address the shortage of donor organs. The use of a perfusion pump allows the clinician to decide whether or not to use a particular expanded criteria donor kidney. Expanded criteria donors may be justified by meticulous selection of each donor for recipients, along with more sophisticated surgical techniques to maximize the kidney donor pool.

MeSH terms

  • Graft Survival
  • Humans
  • Infusion Pumps
  • Kidney / physiology
  • Kidney Transplantation* / standards
  • Middle Aged
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Time Factors
  • Tissue Donors* / supply & distribution
  • Treatment Outcome