Marijuana may not affect kidney transplant outcomes
Turns
out, the usage of marijuana
by kidney donors has no measurable effect on the outcome of kidney
transplants for donors or recipients.
A
new study in Clinical Kidney Journal reviewed living kidney
transplants
performed between January 2000 and May 2016 in a single academic institution.
Donor and recipient groups were each divided into two groups by donor marijuana
usage, comparing the outcomes of the transplants using a variety of tests.
Researchers
reviewed 294 living donor
medical records, including 31 marijuana using donors. They also reviewed 230
living kidney recipient records, including 27 cannabis-using kidney recipients.
The use of grass in the United States has been steadily increasing over the
last 10 years. Marijuana use has more than doubled between 2001 and 2013, with
54.1 per cent of adolescents claiming to have initiated its use by the age of
21.
There
is a shortage of kidneys available for transplantation. As of 2018, there are
nearly 100,000 patients on the waiting list for donor kidney transplants, with
an average wait time of 3 to 10 years depending on region and blood type. Some
patients do not survive long enough on dialysis to receive a transplant. Read
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