Importance Organ procurement organizations are increasingly turning to expedited (ie, out-of-sequence) allocation of deceased donor kidneys, citing maximal utility of kidneys at risk of nonuse. Objective To identify and compare kidney pairs from the same donor from whom 1 kidney was transplanted in sequence and the other out of sequence. Design, Setting, and Participants This retrospective cohort study used US kidney transplant registry data obtained from the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients to identify kidney transplant donors from whom at least 1 deceased donor kidney was transplanted out of sequence in 2020 through 2024. Main Outcomes and Measures Incidence of unilateral out-of-sequence transplants, in which 1 kidney was placed in sequence and the other kidney from the same donor was placed out of sequence, and survival outcomes of recipients. Results A total of 15 602 kidneys from 8544 deceased donors (5304 62.1% male; mean SD age at organ recovery, 44.4 15.1 years) with at least 1 kidney transplanted out of sequence were included in the analysis. Of these, 4313 donors (50.5%) had a unilateral kidney placed out of sequence. Compared with recipients of unilateral in-sequence kidneys, recipients of unilateral out-of-sequence kidneys included a greater percentage of older (median IQR age at transplant, 60.0 50.0-67.0 vs 57.0 47.0-65.0 years), Asian (472 10.9% vs 282 6.5%), White (2391 66.1% vs 2197 50.9%), and male (2850 66.1% vs 2453 56.9%) recipients, as well as those with private insurance (1255 29.1% vs 990 23.0%) and preemptive transplant (739 17.1% vs 438 10.2%) (all P lt; .001). Unilateral out-of-sequence kidneys accounted for 38.2% of all out-of-sequence transplants over the course of the study period. From 2020 through 2024, unilateral out-of-sequence kidneys increased from 97 instances from 15 organ procurement organizations to 1698 kidneys from all 56 organizations in the US. The first instance of an out-of-sequence refusal code (ie, the point in the waiting list at which kidneys were first placed out of the standard sequence) decreased from median (IQR) sequence number 393 (155-889) in 2020 to 28 (11-77) in 2024. The proportion of donor-related reasons for refusal decreased 10% to 15% during the study period. In adjusted Cox models, outcomes for unilateral out-of-sequence transplant were not significantly different for patient survival (hazard ratio, 0.84 95% CI, 0.70-1.02; P = .08) or graft survival (hazard ratio, 0.87 95% CI, 0.70-1.08; P = .20), compared with unilateral in-sequence transplant. Conclusions and Relevance Findings from this cohort study of unilateral out-of-sequence transplants highlight the importance of understanding donor and allocation factors that resulted in bypassing standard allocation and are critical to designing future iterations of the organ allocation system with improved organ use rates.
Yu et al. (Wed,) studied this question.