kidney transplantation where patients with incompatible donors swap kidneys to receive a compatible kidney

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Journal of Kidney Treatment and Diagnosis is a peer-reviewed, Open Access journal focused on Clinical Nephrologypractice and related diseases.It covers several clinical areas of renal medicine, such as dialysis, transplantation, diabetes, anaemia, pharmacy nutrition and clinical aspects of kidney care.

Kidney Paired Donation (KPD) or Paired Exchange, is an approach to living donor kidney transplantation where patients with incompatible donors swap kidneys to receive a compatible kidney. KPD is used in situations where a potential donor is incompatible. Because better donor HLA and age matching are correlated with lower lifetime mortalityand longer lasting kidney transplants, many compatible pairs are also participating in swaps to find better matched kidneys. In the United States, the National Kidney Registry organizes the majority of U.S. KPD transplants, including the largest swaps. Swaps involving more than two recipients are termed a kidney chain. The first large swap was a 60 participant chain in 2012 that appeared on the front page of the New York Times and the second, even larger swap, included 70 participants and was completed in 2014. Other KPD programs in the U.S. include the UNOS program which was launched in 2010 and completed its 100th KPD transplant in 2014 and the Alliance for Paired Donation.

According to a 2019 study, kidney exchanges improve overall transplant quality, which leads to fewer transplant failures. The exchanges also reduce waiting times for patients needing kidney transplants. The study found that the health care cost savings of kidney exchanges are substantial

More than one-third of potential living kidney donors who want to donate their kidney to a friend or family member cannot donate due to blood type or antibody incompatibility. Historically, these donors would be turned away and the patient would lose the opportunity to receive a life-saving transplant. KPD overcomes donor-recipient incompatibility by swapping kidneys between multiple donor-recipient pairs. KPD is also being used to find better donor-recipient matches for compatible pairs who want a lower lifetime mortality and longer lasting transplant

You may submit your Research/Review article, Case Report, Short communications, Editorials etc., on or before July 31st, 2020 as a reply to this mail.

With Regards,
John Robert                              
Managing Editor
Journal of Kidney Treatment and Diagnosis