[Skip to Navigation]
Sign In
Article
May 1992

Combined Kidney and Pancreas Transplantation: A 3-Year Experience

Author Affiliations

From the Divisions of Organ Transplantation (Drs Shaffer, Madras, Sahyoun, and Monaco) and Nephrology (Drs Williams, Kaldany, and D'Elia), New England Deaconess Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.

Arch Surg. 1992;127(5):574-578. doi:10.1001/archsurg.1992.01420050098012
Abstract

• Between May 1988 and September 1991, we performed 26 simultaneous kidney and pancreas transplants and one pancreas transplant after a kidney transplant. All transplants consisted of bladder drainage via a duodenal segment. Actuarial patient, kidney, and pancreas graft survival rates at 12 months were 96%, 88%, and 85%, respectively, and at 24 months were 96%, 88%, and 81%, respectively, and were not significantly different from those of diabetic recipients of cadaver kidney transplants alone. Excellent long-term glycemic control was obtained as monitored by fasting blood glucose and glycosylated hemoglobin levels and by oral glucose tolerance tests. The mean period of hospitalization and number of hospital admissions in the first year posttransplant were significantly greater for patients who received combined kidney and pancreas transplants than for those who received cadaver kidney transplants alone. Combined kidney and pancreas transplants can be performed with patient and graft survival comparable to those of kidney transplants alone, with excellent long-term glycemic control, but result in increased morbidity in the first postoperative year.

(Arch Surg. 1992;127:574-578)

Add or change institution
×