# Donor Blood Tests do Not Predict Pancreas Graft Survival After Simultaneous Pancreas Kidney Transplantation; a National Cohort Study

**Authors:** Ning Xuan Ho, Samuel J. Tingle, Abdullah K. Malik, Emily R. Thompson, Georgios Kourounis, Aimen Amer, Sanjay Pandanaboyana, Colin Wilson, Steve White

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/ti.2024.12864 · 2024-05-20

## TL;DR

This study shows that donor blood tests like amylase and transaminases do not predict pancreas transplant success, suggesting these donors can safely be used to increase the donor pool.

## Contribution

The study is the largest and most robust to date, showing donor blood tests do not affect pancreas graft survival after SPK transplantation.

## Key findings

- Donor amylase levels had no significant impact on pancreas graft survival (aHR = 0.944).
- Alanine transaminase levels also did not influence graft survival (aHR = 0.967).
- Non-linear analysis confirmed no significant association between donor blood tests and transplant outcomes.

## Abstract

Simultaneous pancreas-kidney (SPK) transplantation improves quality of life and limits progression of diabetic complications. There is reluctance to accept pancreata from donors with abnormal blood tests, due to concern of inferior outcomes. We investigated whether donor amylase and liver blood tests (markers of visceral ischaemic injury) predict pancreas graft outcome using the UK Transplant Registry (2016-2021). 857 SPK recipients were included (619 following brainstem death, 238 following circulatory death). Peak donor amylase ranged from 8 to 3300 U/L (median = 70), and this had no impact on pancreas graft survival when adjusting for multiple confounders (aHR = 0.944, 95% CI = 0.754–1.81). Peak alanine transaminases also did not influence pancreas graft survival in multivariable models (aHR = 0.967, 95% CI = 0.848–1.102). Restricted cubic splines were used to assess associations between donor blood tests and pancreas graft survival without assuming linear relationships; these confirmed neither amylase, nor transaminases, significantly impact pancreas transplant outcome. This is the largest, most statistically robust study evaluating donor blood tests and transplant outcome. Provided other factors are acceptable, pancreata from donors with mild or moderately raised amylase and transaminases can be accepted with confidence. The use of pancreas grafts from such donors is therefore a safe, immediate, and simple approach to expand the donor pool to reach increasing demands.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Pancreas (MESH:D010190), circulatory death (MESH:D012769), visceral ischaemic injury (MESH:D007418), brainstem death (MESH:D003643), diabetic complications (MESH:D048909)

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11144863/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11144863