TY - CHAP M1 - Book, Section TI - Kidney-Paired Donation A1 - Serur, David A2 - Molmenti, Ernesto Pompeo Y1 - 2023 N1 - T2 - Molmenti’s Kidney and Pancreas Transplantation: Operative Techniques and Medical Management, 2e AB - Patients with an ABO-incompatible potential living donor or a crossmatch-positive living donor have traditionally been relegated to waiting on the deceased donor list.While desensitization is available for some ABO-incompatible patients and some crossmatch-positive patients, it comes at the price of an increase in immunosuppression and the risks of infection and malignancies.Kidney-paired donation (KPD) obviates the need for this excess immunosuppression by providing the recipient with an ABO-compatible donor or a donor to which they are not crossmatch positive.Even with a KPD, it is at times difficult to find matches for the extremely highly sensitized patients, those with 98–100% calculated Panel Reactive Antibodies (cPRA). These patients may benefit from the combined approach of desensitization and KPD.Currently KPD transplants account for 1000 transplants per year, about 15% of all living transplants in the United States. It is not uncommon now even for compatible pairs to enter KPD if the recipient wishes to obtain a younger or better-matched kidney.It is estimated that with a fully functional national KPD program, 3000 extra transplants would be facilitated per year. SN - PB - McGraw Hill CY - New York, NY Y2 - 2024/04/20 UR - accesssurgery.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=1194180086 ER -