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. 2025;33(4):341–645. doi: 10.5455/aim.2025.33.341-345

Table 2. Outcome and characteristics of kidney transplant in CKD.

No Reference Study Post-Transplant Quality of Life Graft Survival Rates Post-Transplant Complications Health Status Main Findings Differences Between Adult and Geriatric Groups Comparisons Between Europe and Indonesia Implications
1 Liu et al2023 N/A Comparable 1-year patient survival and death-censored graft survival Increased risk of DGF in AKI groups (34.1% pediatric, 38.5% adult CKD patients Pediatric AKI kidneys show superior recovery of allograft function compared to adult AKI kidneys N/A N/A utilizing pediatric AKI donors to reduce waiting-list mortality.
2 Grosyeux. 2024 N/A N/A N/A Kidney transplant patients and non-kidney transplant patients The EKFC equation showed less bias in estimating GFR compared to CKD-EPI/CKiD equations among kidney transplant patients. Renal transplant status significantly influenced estimation bias. N/A N/A Accurate GFR estimation is crucial for managing kidney transplant patients, suggesting the need for tailored equations in clinical practice.
3 Hakeem. et al. 2024 N/A Significantly inferior long-term allograft outcomes for Asian and black donors compared to white donors N/A N/A Asian and black donor-recipient pairs have poorer graft outcomes compared to white counterparts. Increased deceased donation among ethnic minorities could enhance the recipient pool and improve outcomes. N/A N/A Need for refined approaches to increase organ donation from ethnic minorities to improve transplant outcomes.
4 Yunanto et al.2022 overall quality of life is increased and remain stable during follow up months compared to pre-operative N/A N/A CKD patients Overall quality of life shown gain between pre-transplant and months post transplant N/A N/A Kidney transplant subjectively increase the quality of life in patient with CKD, higher transplant volume is needed.
5 Hustrini et al. 2023 N/A N/A N/A N/A Diabetes, Glomerulonephritis, and Hypertension are the most common etiologies patient developing CKD needed RRT in Indonesia N/A the leading cause of CKD almost similar with EU region. with diabetes being the most common multi-discipline treatment is necessary to prevent Chronic kidney disease
6 Situmorang et al. 2023 N/A One-Year:Patient survival rate: 96%Graft survival rate 97% The mortality rate is higher in the DGF group Single Renal Artery vs Multiple Renal Artery there is no difference in SRA vs MRA renal transplant method; the DGF group showed lower 1 year survival N/A the results (One-year graft survival, and patient survival) is consistent with Europe results There is no difference between SRA and MRA in kidney transplants. dialysis time before patient undergo KT has no significant effect.
7 Mageri et al. 2023 N/A 3 year & 5 year graft survival rate (donor age)<60: 87% & 78%60-70: 85 & 76 %>70: 84 & 66 %graft loss: 57 (11.6%) N/A N/A HLA-antibodies presence being the most significant predictor of graft loss compared to other factor There is no significant difference in graft survival between age groups, very old donor had lower graft rejection rate but with lower graft function N/A kidney transplantation from very old donors seems to be a valid option.
8 Huijben et al2023 N/A 1, 2, and 5 years survivalPatient survival rate: 96.8%, 94.9%, 88.3%Graft survival rate 92.3%, 89.5%, 80.2% N/A Kidney transplant patients and Dialysis patient Increased prevalence of the KT in the elderly groups (>65 years) in several regions, better transplant outcome over years. Younger transplant recipient shown better results overall. older transplant shown better results recently The incidence and graft survival rate is relevant to indonesia recent reports although the improved outcomes. further increase in theprevalence of KRT means higher high-quality transplant rates are needed.