Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT04182607

Donor Outcomes Following Hand-Assisted and Robotic Living Donor Nephrectomy: a Retrospective Review

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
240 (estimated)
Sponsor
Methodist Health System · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

1.1. Background: Renal transplantation is the treatment of choice for eligible patients with end-stage renal disease. It provides better outcomes in terms of life expectancy and quality of life than dialysis (Liu, Narins, Maley, Frank, \& Lallas, 2012). Kidney transplants from living donors also have additional benefits in terms of graft function and survival compared to transplants from cadaver donors (Galvani et al., 2012). Living donor transplants provide an opportunity to have good quality grafts and to perform the procedure when the recipient is in an optimal clinical status (Creta et al., 2019). Laparoscopic donor nephrectomy was first introduced in 1995 and is currently accepted as the gold standard for kidney procurement from living donors. The first worldwide robotic assisted laparoscopic donor nephrectomy was performed in 2000 by Horgan et al. (Horgan et al., 2007). The main obstacle to living donation is the exposure of a healthy subject to the risks of a major surgical intervention. Therefore, efforts have been made to reduce complications and postoperative pain, achieve faster recovery, and minimize the surgical incisions. Minimally invasive procedures like hand-assisted and robotic approaches greatly enhance living donation rates, and in 2001 the number of living donors exceeded the number of cadaver donors (Horgan et al., 2007). 1.2. Aim(s)/Objective(s): The objective of this study is to compare intra- and postoperative patient outcomes of kidney donors following hand-assisted and robotic kidney transplants at a single center. 1.3. Rationale for the study: More research is needed regarding the differences between minimally invasive approaches to kidney transplantation.

Detailed description

This is a retrospective, single-center cohort study. Clinical data will be collected from electronic medical records (EMRs) on donors and recipients who underwent a minimally invasive kidney transplantation procedure. Data from all patients who had a hand-assisted or robotic minimally invasive kidney transplantation procedure at Methodist Dallas Medical Center (MDMC) between January 2006 and November 2019 will be included in the study.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREkidney transplantClinical data will be collected from electronic medical records (EMRs) on donors and recipients who underwent a minimally invasive kidney transplantation procedure

Timeline

Start date
2019-11-06
Primary completion
2025-11-01
Completion
2025-11-01
First posted
2019-12-02
Last updated
2024-11-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04182607. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.