Prescriptive Analytics Determining Which Patients Undergoing Simultaneous Liver-Kidney Transplant May Benefit From High-Risk Organs.

Journal: Experimental And Clinical Transplantation : Official Journal Of The Middle East Society For Organ Transplantation
Published:
Abstract

Objectives: Simultaneous liver-kidney transplant is a treatment option for patients with end-stage liver disease and concomitant irreversible kidney injury. We developed a decision toolto aid transplant programs to advise their candidates for simultaneous liver-kidney transplant on accepting high-risk grafts versus waiting for lower-risk grafts. Materials and

Methods: To find the critical decision factors, we used the prescriptive analytic technique of microsimulation.All probabilities used in the simulation model were calculated from Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network data collected from February 27, 2002 to June 30, 2018.

Results: The simulated patient population results revealed, on average, that high-risk candidates for simultaneous liver-kidney transplant who accept highrisk organs have 254.8 ± 225.4 weeks of life compared with 285.6 ± 232.4 weeks if they waited for better organs. However, critical decision factors included the specific organ offer rates within individual transplant programs and the rank of the candidate in each program's waitlist. Thus, for programs with lower organ offer rates or for candidates with a rare blood type, a high-risk simultaneous liver-kidney transplant candidate might accept a high-risk organ for longer survival.

Conclusions: Our model can be utilized to determine when acceptance of high-risk organs for patients being considered for simultaneous liver-kidney transplant would lead to survival benefit, based on probabilities specific for their program.

Relevant Conditions

Kidney Transplant