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Living donor kidney allograft survival ≥ 50 years.

Caroline RochonArthur J Matas
Published in: Clinical transplantation (2017)
The first successful kidney transplant occurred in 1954. Since then, long-term graft survival has been an elusive idealistic goal of transplantation. Yet 62 years later, we know of only 6 kidney transplant recipients who have achieved ≥  50-year graft survival while being on no immunosuppression or a substantially reduced regimen. Herein, we report graft survival  ≥ 50 years in 2 living donor recipients who have been maintained on standard-of-care immunosuppression the entire time. For our 2 recipients, their living donor's altruism altered the course, length, and quality of their life, which by all accounts can be deemed normal: They attended college, held jobs, had successful pregnancies, raised families, and were productive members of society. Both donors are still alive and well, more than 50 years post-donation; both have an acceptable GFR and normal blood pressure, with hyperlipidemia as their only medical problem. These 2 intertwined stories illustrate the tremendous potential of a successful kidney transplant: long-term survival with a normal lifestyle and excellent quality of life, even after more than 5 decades on full-dose immunosuppression.
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