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The Korean Organ Transplantation Registry (KOTRY): an overview and summary of the kidney-transplant cohort

Hee Jung Jeon, Tai Yeon Koo, Man Ki Ju, Dong‐Wan Chae, Soo Jin Na Choi, Myoung Soo Kim, Jung‐Hwa Ryu, Jong Cheol Jeon, Curie Ahn, Jaeseok Yang, Korean Organ Transplantation Registry Study Group

2022Kidney Research and Clinical Practice19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: As the need for a nationwide organ-transplant registry emerged, a prospective registry, the Korean Organ Transplantation Registry (KOTRY), was initiated in 2014. Here, we present baseline characteristics and outcomes of the kidney-transplant cohort for 2014 through 2019. METHODS: The KOTRY consists of five organ-transplant cohorts (kidney, liver, lung, heart, and pancreas). Data and samples were prospectively collected from transplant recipients and donors at baseline and follow-up visits; and epidemiological trends, allograft outcomes, and patient outcomes, such as posttransplant complications, comorbidities, and mortality, were analyzed. RESULTS: From 2014 to 2019, there were a total of 6,129 registered kidney transplants (64.8% with living donors and 35.2% with deceased donors) with a mean recipient age of 49.4 ± 11.5 years, and 59.7% were male. ABO-incompatible transplants totaled 17.4% of all transplants, and 15.0% of transplants were preemptive. The overall 1- and 5-year patient survival rates were 98.4% and 95.8%, respectively, and the 1- and 5-year graft survival rates were 97.1% and 90.5%, respectively. During a mean follow-up of 3.8 years, biopsy-proven acute rejection episodes occurred in 17.0% of cases. The mean age of donors was 47.3 ± 12.9 years, and 52.6% were male. Among living donors, the largest category of donors was spouses, while, among deceased donors, 31.2% were expanded-criteria donors. The mean serum creatinine concentrations of living donors were 0.78 ± 0.62 mg/dL and 1.09 ± 0.24 mg/dL at baseline and 1 year after kidney transplantation, respectively. CONCLUSION: The KOTRY, a systematic Korean transplant cohort, can serve as a valuable epidemiological database of Korean kidney transplants.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCohortTransplantationInternal medicineOrgan transplantationKidney transplantationProspective cohort studySurgeryOrgan Donation and TransplantationRenal Transplantation Outcomes and TreatmentsTransplantation: Methods and Outcomes
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