Children with kidney failure are given high priority in the allocation of deceased donor kidneys because kidney disease interferes with normal growth. It's unclear if some children face racial disparities in this allocation, however.
To investigate whether there are racial disparities in the survival of children with kidney failure, Elaine Ku, MD (University of California San Francisco) and her colleagues analyzed information on 12,123 non-Hispanic black, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic white children who started renal replacement therapy (either dialysis or transplantation) between 1995 and 2011 and were followed up through 2012.
During a median follow-up of 7.1 years, 1600 children died. Black children had a 36% higher risk of death than white children, which was mostly attributed to differences in access to transplantation. Hispanic children had lower risk of death than non-Hispanic white children even though they had lower access to transplantation. Also, when investigators accounted for black children's reduced access to transplantation, there was no longer an appreciable difference in survival in black and white children.