Donating a kidney is safer than ever, reassuring research finds (2024)

There's never been a safer time to give a kidney.

The risk of death for people who donated a kidney has dropped by more than half in the last decade, according to a study published Wednesday.

“It’s just becoming safer and safer for people to donate,” said Dr. Dorry Segev, a transplant surgeon at NYU Langone Health and senior author of the study.

The overall risk of death for a kidney donor has always been low, but advances in surgery and medical care, along with more careful donor selection, have improved the odds even more.

The kidneys play a vital role in health, responsible for filtering harmful toxins out of our blood and regulating blood pressure. As rates of chronic conditions such as diabetes and high blood pressure — both may contribute to renal disease — have increased, the need for kidney donors has become more urgent.

Nearly 90,000 people are waiting for kidney transplants in the U.S., with the average wait time around three to five years. Kidneys are the most commonly transplanted organ, with an estimated 27,000 kidney transplants performed annually.

For the new study, published in JAMA, doctors looked at data on people who died within 90 days after a kidney transplant surgery from 1993 to 2022. Data came from both the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients and the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network, a nonprofit organization that administers the nation’s only transplant network authorized by the U.S. Congress.

In total, there were 164,593 kidney donors included in the study. Thirty-six died within 90 days after donation.

From 1993 to 2002, there 13 total deaths after the procedure for a mortality rate of 3 per 10,000 people; from 2003 to 2012, there were 18 deaths, a mortality rate of 2.9 per 10,000.

Deaths dropped significantly from 2013 to 2022, to just five, or a mortality rate of 0.9 per 10,000.

During this time, laparoscopic surgery —a minimally invasive technique where surgeons use small incisions and specialized instruments to remove the kidney — became the standard of care, Segev said. Previously, patients underwent open donor nephrectomy, which required a much larger incision that needed longer recovery time andmore risk of complications.

In previous decades, donors who were male and peoplewith a history of high blood pressure were more likely to die within 90 days of surgery than other donors. Most of the deaths occurred in the first seven days after surgery. The most common cause of death from the procedure was excessive bleeding, or hemorrhage.

“It’s really important for us as a community that takes care of these patients to make sure the message is consistent,” said Dr. Kassem Safa, associate medical director for the kidney transplant program at Massachusetts General Hospital. “We tell them the truth about the risks they’re taking, and this study just validates the fact that it’s a very safe surgery with a very tiny risk — but not a zero risk.”

It is critical that this procedure be as safe as possible, as many patients who donate kidneys are previously healthy with no medical problems.

“The first thing we tell donors is you don’t have to do this and you’re not going to get any medical benefits from it,” Safa said.

Fortunately, long-term data from organ donors has shown that their kidney function tends to remain stable and the risk of developing chronic kidney disease is only slightly higher than in those who do not donate, Safa said.

Doctors are hopeful that reassuring data like this will ultimately help solve the shortage of donors in the U.S.

“Anything that comes along that says being a living donor is getting safer and safer over time will hopefully encourage more people to step forward and donate and give the gift of life,” said Dr. John Friedewald, medical director of the kidney transplant program at Northwestern Medicine.

Friedewald, who was not involved with the study, said this updated data will ultimately help doctors better consent patients who are about to undergo the procedure.

Tracy McKibben, chair of the board of directors at the National Kidney Foundation, donated a kidney to her mother in 2009. Her mother, who was previously a very active person and a frequent traveler, had stopped doing much of what she enjoyed as she had to frequent a dialysis center three days a week.

Donating a kidney is safer than ever, reassuring research finds (1)

That all changed when McKibben gave her the ultimate gift.

“It was just a world of difference for her and a world of difference for me,” she said. “Being able to see her have her old life that she hadn’t had for some time when she started having to undergo dialysis.”

CORRECTION:(Aug. 28, 2024, 1:46 p.m. ET): A previous version of this article misstated the number of deaths and the death rates for kidney donors. From 1993 to 2002, there were 13 deaths and a death rate of 3 per 10,000, not a death rate of 13 per 10,000. From 2003 to 2012, there were 18 total deaths for a death rate of 2.9 per 10,000, not a death rate of 18 per 10,000. For 2013 to 2022, the death rate was 0.9 per 10,000, not 0.05 per 10,000.

Akshay Syal, M.D.

Akshay Syal, M.D.,is a medical fellow with the NBC News Health and Medical Unit.

Donating a kidney is safer than ever, reassuring research finds (2024)
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