Race, Risk, and Willingness of End-Stage Renal Disease Patients Without Hepatitis C Virus to Accept an HCV-Infected Kidney Transplant
McCauley M, Mussell A, Goldberg D, Sawinski D, Molina RN, Tomlin R, Doshi SD, Abt P, Bloom R, Blumberg E, Kulkarni S, Esnaola G, Shults J, Thiessen C, Reese PP. Race, Risk, and Willingness of End-Stage Renal Disease Patients Without Hepatitis C Virus to Accept an HCV-Infected Kidney Transplant. Transplantation 2018, 102: e163-e170. PMID: 29346260, DOI: 10.1097/tp.0000000000002099.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultBlack or African AmericanDonor SelectionFemaleHealth Knowledge, Attitudes, PracticeHepatitis CHumansInterviews as TopicKidney Failure, ChronicKidney TransplantationMaleMiddle AgedPatient Acceptance of Health CareRiskUnited StatesConceptsHepatitis C virusHCV cure ratesCure rateC virusUninfected kidneyEnd-stage renal disease patientsHCV-negative patientsPrior transplant recipientsRenal disease patientsHigh cure ratesEffective antiviral treatmentKidney recipientsTransplant recipientsKidney transplantMost patientsOlder patientsAntiviral treatmentWhite patientsDeceased donorsAllograft qualityFuture trialsBlack raceDisease patientsPatient acceptanceYoung donors