Korean J Intern Med.  2020 Nov;35(6):1457-1467. 10.3904/kjim.2019.292.

Characteristics of kidney transplantation recipients over time in South Korea

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, Armed Forces Capital Hospital, Seongnam, Korea
  • 2Department of Biomedical Sciences, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea
  • 3Department of Biomedical Research, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Korea
  • 4Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Korea
  • 5Statistics and Data Center, Samsung Biomedical Research Institute, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul, Korea
  • 6Kidney Research Institute, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea

Abstract

Background/Aims
Detailed nationwide information regarding the recent status and time trends of kidney transplantation (KT) in South Korea is limited.
Methods
We performed a nationwide, population-based cohort study using the national claims database of Korea. We included KT recipients from 2008 to 2016, and their demographic and clinical characteristics were collected. The prognostic outcome was graft failure consisted of patient death and death-censored graft failure (DCGF).
Results
We studied 14,601 KT recipients with median follow-up duration of 3.96 years. The median age at the time of transplantation consistently increased from the past, and proportion of underlying diabetes mellitus prominently increased, reaching 35.6% in 2016. The preemptive KT accounted for approximately 30% of the total transplantation cases. The recipients showed a 10-year cumulative graft survival rate of 71.8%, consisting of 10-year DCGF free survival of 77.6% and patient survival of 92.8%. Age ≥ 20 and < 30 years, age ≥ 70 years, underlying history of diabetes, non-preemptive transplantation, and poor compliance on tacrolimus and mycophenolic acid were the significant risk factors associated with worse DCGF outcome. The economic cost of KT showed prominently increasing trends, reaching a total insured fee of > 60,000,000$ in 2016. However, the expansion was mainly burdened by the national insurance service but not by the patients.
Conclusions
In South Korea, the number of kidney transplantation in elderly or in patients with comorbidities has been increasing. Complex clinical factors were associated with medication compliance and patient prognosis.

Keyword

Kidney transplantation; Graft survival; Epidemiology
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