Minimally invasive, robot-assisted procedure for kidney transplantation among morbidly obese: Positive outcomes at 5 years post-transplant.
Mario SpaggiariFrances Rose LendackiCaterina Di BellaPier Cristoforo GiulianottiEnrico BenedettiJose OberholzerIvo TzvetanovPublished in: Clinical transplantation (2018)
The pre-transplant weight loss required of end-stage renal disease patients is often unachievable. Though robot-assisted procedures among extremely obese have shown minimal complication, long-term outcomes are understudied. Previously, we reported no difference in 6-month patient and graft survival among 28 robot-assisted transplant cases (2009-2013) and 28 open controls (2004-2010). Groups were frequency-matched on age, sex, race, donor compatibility, disease, and dialysis history. Cases had greater median pre-transplant body mass index (BMI; 42.3 (31.1-64.3) vs 36.8 (30.0-51.1)). Here, we compared patient and graft survival through 5 years post-transplant. Infection, wound complications, and significant re-hospitalizations were collected. One-, three-, and five-year graft survival were 100%, 100%, and 89.3% among cases, and 96.4%, 85.7%, and 78.6% among controls. Rejection within 1 year was greater among cases (11 vs 8). Five-year rates were similar (P = 0.54). Post-transplant BMI remained comparable. No cases and eight controls experienced surgical site infection (SSI). Two cases and one control experienced hernias. Post-transplant diabetes was documented among five cases and six controls. Three deaths occurred among cases, two among controls. This is the most extensive known follow-up of such obese recipients of robot-assisted transplant. Our procedure is a promising pathway to transplant and decreased mortality for those deemed too high risk for conventional surgery.
Keyphrases
- robot assisted
- minimally invasive
- end stage renal disease
- weight loss
- chronic kidney disease
- body mass index
- surgical site infection
- peritoneal dialysis
- type diabetes
- kidney transplantation
- adipose tissue
- bariatric surgery
- ejection fraction
- risk factors
- cardiovascular disease
- physical activity
- case report
- skeletal muscle
- patient reported
- glycemic control