G. Merkely (Cambridge, US)

Brigham Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School Department of Sport Medicine

Presenter Of 1 Presentation

Podium Presentation Allografts

16.3.7 - Sex Mismatch Between Donor and Recipient is Associated with Decreased Graft Survivorship After Osteochondral Allograft Transplantation

Presentation Topic
Allografts
Date
14.04.2022
Lecture Time
12:09 - 12:18
Room
Potsdam 1
Session Name
Session Type
Free Papers
Disclosure
No Significant Commercial Relationship

Abstract

Purpose

Sex mismatch between donor and recipient has been considered a potential contributor to adverse outcomes following solid organ transplantation. However, the influence of sex mismatching in osteochondral allograft (OCA) transplantation is yet to be determined. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether donor-recipient sex mismatching impacts graft survival after OCA transplantation.

Methods and Materials

Patients who underwent OCA transplantation between November 2013 and November 2017 by a single surgeon were included. Cumulative survival was performed through the Kaplan–Meier method using log-rank tests to compare patients with similar donor groups. Multivariable Cox regression analysis adjusted for patient age, graft size and BMI were used to evaluate the influence of donor-recipient sex on graft survival.

Results

A total of 154 patients were included, 102 (66.2%) who received OCAs from a same-sex donor, and 52 (33.8%) from a different sex donor. At 5 years follow-up, a significantly lower graft survival rate was observed for different-sex donor transplantation in comparison to the same-sex donors (63% versus 92%, p=0.01). When correcting for age, graft size and BMI, donor-recipient sex mismatching demonstrated a 2.9 times greater likelihood to fail at 5 years compared to the donor-recipient same-sex (p=0.03). A subgroup analysis showed no significant difference in graft survival between female-to-female and female-to-male groups (91% and 84%, respectively). Conversely, male-to-male demonstrated a significantly higher cumulative 5-year survival (94%, p=0.04), whereas a lower survival was found in the male-to-female group (64%, p = 0.04). Multivariable Cox regression indicated a 2.6 times higher likelihood of failure for male-to-female in comparison with other groups (p=0.04). Male-to-male had a tendency toward the decreased likelihood of OCA failure (0.33 hazard ratio), although without statistical significance (p=0.052).

Conclusion

Mismatch between donor and recipient sex has a negative effect on OCA survival following transplantation, particularly in those cases when male donor tissue was transplanted into a female recipient.

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