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“Early” and “Late” Hospital readmissions in the first year after kidney transplant at a single center

Michelle C. Nguyen, Christina Avila, Guy Brock, Jason Benedict, Iyore James, Ashraf El‐Hinnawi, Amer Rajab, Elmahdi Elkhammas, Ronald P. Pelletier, Mitchell L. Henry, Ginny L. Bumgardner

2020Clinical Transplantation14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hospital readmission (HR) after surgery is considered a quality metric. METHODS: Data on 2371 first-time adult kidney transplant (KT) recipients were collected to analyze the "early" (≤30 days) and "late" (31-365 days) HR patterns after KT at a single center over a 12-year time span (2002-2013). RESULTS: 30-day, 90-day, and 1-year HR were 31%, 41%, and 53%, respectively. Risk factors for HR included age >50, female sex, black race, BMI >30, transplant LOS >5 days, and pre-transplant time on dialysis >765 days. Indications for early (n = 749) and late (n = 508) HR were similar. Early HR (OR: 3.80, P = .007) and black race (OR: 2.38, P = .009) were associated with higher odds of 1-year graft failure while frequency (1-2, 3-4, 5+) of HR (ORs: 4.68, 8.36, 9.44, P < .001) and age > 50 (OR: 2.11, P = .007) were associated with higher odds of 1-year mortality. Transplant LOS > 5 days increased both odds of 1-year graft failure (OR: 3.51, P = .001) and mortality (OR: 2.05, P = .006). One-year graft and recipient survival were 96.7% and 94.8%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Hospital readmission was associated with reduced graft and patient survival; however, despite a relatively high and consistent HR rate after KT, overall 1-year graft and patient survival was high.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDialysisOdds ratioSingle CenterInternal medicineSurgeryTransplantationKidney transplantationRenal Transplantation Outcomes and TreatmentsTransplantation: Methods and OutcomesHeart Failure Treatment and Management
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