Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
Volume 17, Issue 4 , Pages 358-367, July 2010

The Evolving Challenge of Evaluating Older Renal Transplant Candidates

  • Erica L. Hartmann

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence to Erica L. Hartmann, MD, Department of Internal Medicine-Nephrology, Wake Forest University Health Sciences, Winston-Salem, NC 27157.
  • ,
  • Christine Wu

Department of Internal Medicine-Nephrology, Wake Forest University Health Sciences, Winston-Salem, NC; and Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Renal-Electrolyte Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA

The demographic factor over age 65 years represents the fastest growing segment of the end-stage kidney disease, wait-listed for kidney transplant, and transplanted populations. As a result, transplant physicians are increasingly asked to evaluate candidacy in older patients. Relatively little attention has been paid to the unique aspects of the pretransplant evaluation in older persons. The natural tendency is to focus on individual comorbidities as isolated entities, such as a history of coronary heart disease, while ignoring factors more specific to the aging process itself. Assessment of the burden of comorbidity along with the application of standardized geriatric assessment tools, such as the measurement of physical and cognitive function, has the potential to refine the pretransplant evaluation process in older kidney transplant candidates.

Key Words: Transplantation, Kidney evaluation assessment, Geriatric aging comorbidity

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PII: S1548-5595(10)00088-1

doi:10.1053/j.ackd.2010.03.012

Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
Volume 17, Issue 4 , Pages 358-367, July 2010