| 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. |