Background: The delayed graft function (DGF) in kidney transplantation (KT) is a risk factor for long-term poor graft survival. The pathogenesis is multifactorial but mainly related to an ischemia-reperfusion injury. However, the graft hemodynamics have been recently identified as a key aspect for early DGF risk assessment and potential therapeutic intervention.
Methods: A pilot study on 20 single kidney grafts from donor after brain death with intraoperative measurement of graft arterial flowmetry, 30 minutes after reperfusion. Exclusion criteria were grafts with multiple arteries or severe atherosclerosis of the recipient's external iliac artery.
Results: KT recipients with DGF (n = 4, 20%) were homogenous with controls (n = 16) in terms of cold ischemia time, donor age, recipients' hemodynamic parameters, renal artery, and recipients' external iliac artery diameters. Nonetheless, at transplant, the kidney grafts that developed DGF were characterized by a significantly higher renal artery resistive index (DGF vs no-DGF 0.96 ± 0.04 vs 0.77 ± 0.13, P = .02), as well as lower flow extraction rate (24.8% ± 11.8 vs 59.2% ± 21.1, P < .01).
Conclusions: Intraoperative arterial graft flowmetry seems to be an effective tool to identify grafts at high risk of DGF.
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