Living with a Transplant

A kidney transplant is another treatment option for kidney failure, but like dialysis it is not a cure. It is a surgical procedure which can give you a new, healthy functioning kidney. The new kidney will perform the functions that the failed kidneys can not. Transplantation offers people with kidney failure increased independence and freedom from the constraints of dialysis. Following a transplant, more normal, active life can be resumed. However, the new kidney requires lifetime management and care.

Transplants are available to medically suitable patients, usually after they have been stabilised on dialysis. Not everyone is suitable for a transplant, your doctor will discuss this with you. Factors that influence your eligibility for a transplant include your general physical health (excluding kidney failure), your willingness to undergo the procedures involved and your acceptance of the idea of transplantation.

Transplant surgery is very successful, over 90% of transplants are working one year later. The procedure takes two to three hours, placing the kidney in the pelvis, near the bladder, through an incision in the lower part of the abdomen. Usually the old kidneys are not removed. As long as the transplanted kidney remains healthy a kidney transplant means that you will not have to continue regular long-term dialysis or have the dietary and lifestyle restrictions imposed by dialysis.

After a transplant immunosuppressive drugs are necessary for the rest of the person's life to prevent the transplant from being rejected by the body. If a transplant is rejected dialysis treatment will again be necessary.

Kidney Donors
Kidneys for transplantation come from two sources; living donors and deceased donors. Living donors are often close family members, although other living donors are increasingly donating kidneys such as the patients partner, friend or more distant family.

In some countries wealthy kidney failure patients offer to pay strangers for their kidneys. Trade in human organs is illegal in New Zealand and doctors who participated in such an arrangement would lose their medical registration and possibly face prosecution.

Kidney Allocation
If no living donor is available, kidney failure patients are usually placed on the waiting list for a deceased donor kidney transplant. Unfortunately there are many more people waiting than there are donors. The average wait for a deceased donor kidney in New Zealand is three to five years depending on the patient's blood group. Kidney allocation depends on matching blood and tissue type as well as on length of time on the list.

Transplantation Advantages
• Full replacement of kidney function
• No dialysis needed
• No internal or external access required
• Normal diet and fluid intake
• Normal lifestyle
• Fewer hospital visits after the first few months

Transplantation Disadvantages
• Stress of waiting for a transplant
• Long waiting times
• Risk of transplant rejection
• Requires regular life-long medication
• Lowered resistance to illness and infection
• Side effects of medication such as increased risk of some cancers
• Risks associated with major surgery