The Benefits of Living Donor Kidney Transplantation
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Why Living Donor Transplants?
Patients with kidney failure or end stage renal disease (ESRD) have several options for treatment, including hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, and renal transplant.
Transplantation can significantly extend the life of ESRD patients. Kidneys for transplantation are made available through deceased donors and living donors.
Deceased Donor: A person who has died and agreed to donate their organs for transplantation. Donated organs are given to people on the national organ transplant waiting list.
Living Donor: A person who (while alive) gives one of his/her own kidneys to someone who needs one.
Living donor kidney transplants achieve long-term results that are significantly better than deceased donor transplants and they eliminate the risk of patient deterioration or death while on the wait list.
As a result, the UT Southwestern Kidney Transplant Team strongly encourages patients to actively pursue living donor kidney transplantation whenever possible.
Types of Living Donations
There are four types of living donations:
The donor may have the wrong blood type or the recipient may have immunity to the donor’s kidney. In this case, the potential donor and the recipient decide together to enter a paired donation program. Paired donation programs match the donor and recipient with another incompatible donor/recipient pair and the kidneys are exchanged between the pairs.

Benefits of Living Donation
Living donor kidney transplants have several advantages over transplants from deceased donors.
Better Results: According to the U.S. Procurement and Transplantation Network, living donation provides for better “allograft” (another name for the transplanted kidney) and patient survival than deceased donor transplantation (see charts below). The Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients shows the most recent results data for the UT Southwestern Medical Center (University Hospital – St. Paul).
Who Can Be a Kidney Donor?
A living donor should be:
Age, gender, and race are not factors in determining a successful match. Every potential donor is evaluated on an individual basis.