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Association of Pre–Kidney Transplant Markers of Mineral and Bone Disorder with Post-Transplant Outcomes

Abstract

Background and objectives

Mineral and bone disorders (MBDs) are common in long-term dialysis patients and are risk factors for unfavorable outcomes. The associations between pretransplant levels of MBD surrogates and outcomes after kidney transplantation are not clear.

Design, setting, participants, & measurements

Data from the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients up to June 2007 were linked to the 5-year (July 2001-June 2006) cohort of a large dialysis organization in the United States. All dialysis patients who received a kidney transplant during this period were identified and divided into groups according to increments of pretransplant MBD markers. Unadjusted and multivariate adjusted predictors of transplant outcomes were examined.

Results

The 11,776 patients were aged 47 ± 14 years and 39% were women. Compared with recipients with pretransplant time-averaged serum alkaline phosphatase of 80-120 U/L, recipients with pretransplant serum alkaline phosphatase of 120-160 and ≥160 U/L had 49% and 64% higher graft failure censored all-cause mortality in multivariable adjusted models. There was no significant association between time-averaged serum alkaline phosphatase categories and risk of death censored graft failure, delayed graft function (DGF), or acute rejection (AR). Compared with recipients with pretransplant time-averaged serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels of 150-300 pg/ml, there was no significant association with graft censored death among recipients with pretransplant serum PTH ≥800 pg/ml. In addition, the risk of graft failure, DGF, and AR did not show any association with time-averaged serum intact PTH level. There was no significant association between time-averaged serum calcium categories and risk of graft failure censored death, DGF, and AR.

Conclusions

In this cohort, hemodialysis patients with pretransplant serum alkaline phosphatase >120 U/L have unfavorable post-transplant mortality, whereas there was no association between serum PTH and serum calcium levels and post-transplant outcomes.

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