Published online Aug 18, 2020. doi: 10.5500/wjt.v10.i8.215
Peer-review started: February 5, 2020
First decision: April 1, 2020
Revised: June 29, 2020
Accepted: July 1, 2020
Article in press: July 1, 2020
Published online: August 18, 2020
Processing time: 183 Days and 18.7 Hours
Currently patients with benign kidney disorder who undergo nephrectomy have three options: Autotransplantation (AutoTx), discarding the kidney or living kidney donation. This study investigates whether a kidney after nephrectomy in patients with benign kidney disorders can be transplanted successfully as an unspecified live kidney donor.
AutoTx of these kidneys adds an additional surgical procedure with higher intraoperative complication rates and morbidity. We investigated the transplant outcome and outcome of these unspecified live kidney donors. If these kidneys can be successfully used in live kidney donation, the donor pool can be enlarged.
The main objective was to investigate whether patients with benign kidney disorders and a medical indication for nephrectomy are suitable donors as unspecified live kidney donors. This may lead to good functioning kidneys which otherwise may have been discarded or autotransplanted, with additional risks.
We searched our centre database for unspecified kidney donations and their recipients. Donors with pre-existing kidney disorders necessitating nephrectomy were followed up and their clinical course was studied.
We present a new way of expanding the donor pool with a new type of living kidney donation, which provided excellent renal outcomes for the donors and the recipients.
Kidneys retrieved after nephrectomy from unspecified donors with urological complications are excellent donor kidneys. Long-term follow-up shows that these kidneys provide a safe and feasible option for enlarging the kidney donor pool. We are the first group to present this type of cohort. Kidneys which would have been discarded or otherwise autotransplanted due to urological complications should be investigated to determine if they can be used as donor kidneys.
When nephrectomy is suggested in patients with benign kidney disorders, these kidneys should be carefully examined to determine whether they can function as kidney donors. Future research should confirm these findings with a larger cohort.