Spousal Renal Transplants: Implications in Developing Countries
D. Bhowmik, S.C. Dash, S. Guleria, A. Panigrahi, S. Gupta, S. Agarwal, S.C. Tiwari, S.N. Mehta, and
N.K. Mehra
U
NTIL 1994 IT WAS a policy at our institute to include
only the following categories of living related donors
in the kidney transplantation program: parents, siblings,
children; and first cousins, uncles, and aunts. Spouses were
excluded as we strongly felt that in the prevailing socioeco-
nomic condition, wives could be coerced into becoming
donors. The Transplantation of Human Organs Act
(THOA) was passed with a view to legalize cadaver trans-
plantation and to regulate transplant-related activities in
India. This Act allows spousal donors in addition to parents,
sibling, and children. All other donors are considered
unrelated and need to be authorized by a committee.
Following the Act we started accepting wives as donors
after carefully ruling out coercion to be a donor. The aim of
this study was to examine the change in the pattern of living
donors following this Act and also their outcome.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
We analyzed the records of all kidney transplants who had living
donors between 1994 and 2001. The immunosuppression regimen
included cyclosporine, prednisolone, and azathioprine. The dosage
was the same in spousal transplants as other patients who received
organs from related donors. All data were entered into MS- Excel
and analyzed using the statistical package WS-Stata. Survival
analysis was performed to estimate graft survival.
RESULTS
There were 73 spousal renal transplants. Except for four
cases, all spousal donors were wives. From 1994 the per-
centage of spouses among living donors increased rapidly
until 1998 thereafter it stabilized at 20% (Fig 1).
Four patients were lost to follow-up. One patient expe-
rienced hyperacute rejection leading to graft nephrectomy.
The rate of acute rejection was the same (42%) among
recipients of related versus spousal renal allografts. Two
patients died in the early postoperative period due to
septicemia with graft failure. Four patients developed
chronic rejection and three subsequently died due to sep-
ticemia. Nineteen of 24 patients died with a normally
functioning allograft due to pneumonia, or sepsis with
hepatic coma in patients with chronic hepatitis. The graft
survival at 1 year was 73%, at 3 years was 66% and at 5
years-was 51%. The corresponding graft survival in all the
patients transplanted at our center was 86.6%, 71%, and
56%.
1
DISCUSSION
The worldwide shortage of organs available for transplan-
tation has led to the use of living unrelated kidney donors.
This group represents the fastest growing donor source in
the United States and provides excellent results.
2
Unfortu-
nately in India organ commerce had been prevalent in many
centers bringing unrelated organ transplantation into disre-
pute.
3
Thankfully the THOA has been by and large suc-
cessful in curbing this menace. Unfortunately cousins,
uncles and aunts cannot now be routinely considered, as
they too have to be cleared by the authorization committee,
leading to a loss of a valuable donor pool.
Gjertson et al felt that encouraging spouses to donate
would be an effective way of reducing the waiting time for
renal transplants,
2
an approach that may not be entirely
appropriate in developing countries.
4
At our center we
exercise caution before accepting wives as donors. We insist
initially on evaluating parents and siblings. Only in the
absence of a suitable parent or sibling do we start the
evaluation of a wife, provided we are convinced that she has
not been coerced to making the decision. Although we
encourage husbands to come forward, few agree. In spite of
these measures, spousal (mainly wife) donors now account
for one fifth of our living donor pool, reflecting the chang-
From the Departments of Nephrology, Histocompatibility, and
Immunogenetics and Surgery, All India Institute of Medical
Sciences, New Delhi, India.
Address reprint requests to Dr. D. Bhowmik, Department of
Nephrology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi
110029 India.
Fig 1. Percentage distribution of living kidney donors.
0041-1345/03/$–see front matter © 2003 by Elsevier Science Inc.
doi:10.1016/S0041-1345(02)03852-6 360 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10010-1710
26 Transplantation Proceedings, 35, 26-27 (2003)