#0415

Long-term kidney function and survival after living donor nephrectomy in individuals with hepatitis B virus infection: a controlled cohort study

Y. Saifu1, T. Lin1

1China

Introduction:

Living donors with HBV infection are increasingly accepted to alleviate organ shortages. However, after donor nephrectomy, the impact of HBV infection on long-term kidney function remains unclear in individuals with a solitary functioning kidney.

Material and methods:

We conducted a retrospective controlled cohort study by including 128 hepatitis B surface antigen-positive (HBsAg+) donors, and 1145 HBsAg- donors. We evaluated long-term kidney and liver function, risk of end-stage kidney diseases (ESKD), all-cause mortality, and cancer-specific mortality.

Results:

After a mean follow-up of 71.3 and 75.4 months, HBsAg+ donors demonstrated a higher increase in serum creatinine (12.1 vs 8.4 μmol/L, P<0.001) compared to HBsAg- donors. The incidence of ESKD was higher in the HBsAg+ donors (3/128 [2.3%] vs 4/1145 [0.3%], P<0.001). Stratified analyses revealed that HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B, abnormal liver function, and especially hepatic damage was associated with higher incidence of ESKD (P=0.004, P=0.008, P<0.001), while those receiving antiviral treatment had a lower incidence (P<0.001). Additionally, HBsAg+ donors had lower overall survival (75.5% vs 96.6%, P<0.001) and higher cancer-specific mortality (15.8% vs 0.2%, P<0.001) compared with HBsAg- donors. Sensitivity analyses after propensity score matching reported similar results.


 


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    上傳者
    TUA線上教育_家琳
    單位
    台灣泌尿科醫學會
    建立
    2026-04-23 20:17:25
    最近修訂
    2026-04-23 20:17:38
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