Impact of recipient and donor smoking in living-donor kidney transplantation: a prospective multicenter cohort study

Hee Yeon Jung, Yena Jeon, Kyu Ha Huh, Jae Berm Park, Cheol Woong Jung, Sik Lee, Seungyeup Han, Han Ro, Jaeseok Yang, Curie Ahn, Jang Hee Cho, Sun Hee Park, Yong Lim Kim, Chan Duck Kim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

The smoking status of kidney transplant recipients and living donors has not been explored concurrently in a prospective study, and the synergistic adverse impact on outcomes remains uncertain. The self-reported smoking status and frequency were obtained from recipients and donors at the time of kidney transplantation in a prospective multicenter longitudinal cohort study (NCT02042963). Smoking status was categorized as “ever smoker” (current and former smokers collectively) or “never smoker.” Among 858 eligible kidney transplant recipients and the 858 living donors, 389 (45.3%) and 241 (28.1%) recipients were considered ever smokers at the time of transplant. During the median follow-up period of 6 years, the rate of death-censored graft failure was significantly higher in ever-smoker recipients than in never-smoker recipients (adjusted HR, 2.82; 95% CI 1.01–7.87; P = 0.048). A smoking history of >20 pack-years was associated with a significantly higher rate of death-censored graft failure than a history of ≤20 pack-years (adjusted HR, 2.83; 95% CI 1.19–6.78; P = 0.019). No donor smoking effect was found in terms of graft survival. The smoking status of the recipients and donors or both did not affect the rate of biopsy-proven acute rejection, major adverse cardiac events, all-cause mortality, or post-transplant diabetes mellitus. Taken together, the recipient’s smoking status before kidney transplantation is dose-dependently associated with impaired survival.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2794-2802
Number of pages9
JournalTransplant International
Volume34
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2021

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