Donor Mini-Nephrectomy
at Rhode Island Hospital 

Donor Mini-Nephrectomy Results in Less Post-op Pain and Shorter Hospitalization

by Paul Morrissey, MD

Mini-nephrectomy incisions shown two weeks after surgery.

One consequence of the wide acceptance of laparoscopic donor nephrectomy has been the development of mini-approaches to open donor nephrectomy. Donor mini-nephrectomy involves removing the donor kidney through a small abdominal incision. In contrast to traditional kidney surgery (using a 6-8 inch incision, overlying the rib cage), the mini-nephrectomy is performed through a 3-4 inch incision on the abdomen (see photos of our patient 2 weeks after surgery at right). The recovery time is quicker with mini-nephrectomy compared with the traditional approach.

Mini-nephrectomy at Rhode Island Hospital

During a three-year period (July 2005-January 2005), 132 living donor transplants were performed at Rhode Island Hospital. Originally, all donor surgery was performed through a standard flank incision (82 patients) with 30% requiring rib resection (Group I). Since October 2005, all ODN were performed through a 3-4 inch anterior incision (Group II). Over the same period, 22 donors had their kidney removed laparoscopically (Group III).

Results


A patient with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS)  had both kidneys removed through bilateral mini-nephrectomy incisions measuring 2.5 inches (7 centimeters).

There were no complications with mini-nephrectomy. No differences were noted in the recipient's kidney function with any approach. The donor's length of stay in the hospital ranged from 2-5 days in all groups. The average length of stay was reduced for Groups II and III compared with the traditional approach. No differences were observed for length of stay, the need for pain medication or return to work for the mini-nephrectomy compared with laparoscopic nephrectomy.

Group
Donor Hospital Days
Delayed Graft Function
Recipient Creatinine
OR
Time
(hours)
Traditional
3.8
2
1.4
4.2
Mini-Nephrectomy
3.2
0
1.3
3.8
Laparoscopic
2.9
1
1.3
4.2

Summary

Mini-nephrectomy and laparoscopic donor nephrectomy are comparable procedures. Mini-nephrectomy is a retroperitoneal operation, which offers some advantages over the abdominal surgery required by laparoscopy. Recovery time for the donors and return to full activity is the same for both operations. Short-term benefits for the donor and long-term results for the kidney recipient are identical. The location of the incision (abdomen versus pubic region) is one of the few significant differences.

For more information, call Rhode Island Hospital transplant services at 401-444-8345.

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