Improving success rates of kidney transplantation
P. I. Terasaki, S. T. Perdue, N. Sasaki, M. R. Mickey and L. Whitby
One-year patient survival rates have improved remarkably, from 84% in 1968
to 97% in 1980 for parental donor grafts, and from 65% to 90% for cadaver
donor grafts. In contrast, graft survival rates showed a steady decline
from 1968 to 1975 but subsequently improved at a rate of 2.4% per year for
parent donor transplants and 2.7% per year for cadaver donor transplants.
During this period of improving survival rates, the pretransplant
transfusion exposure rate increased from 52% in 1977 to 91% by 1981. We
conclude that transplantation has now reached a new level of acceptability
as a clinical treatment modality and that blood transfusion has produced
its effect on graft survival when results are disseminated over a large
number of transplant centers.