Kidney Donor Profile Index (KDPI) Calculator

KDPI – Kidney Donor Profile Index Calculator

KDPI – Kidney Donor Profile Index

Estimates donor kidney quality and expected graft survival from donor-only factors (approximate KDPI)

For use by transplant professionals only. This calculator implements the current donor-only KDRI model and an approximate mapping to KDPI and graft survival, based on recent OPTN/SRTR guidance. It is not the official OPTN KDPI calculator and must not be used as the sole basis for allocation decisions.

Enter deceased donor details

Donor age
Age in years. Younger donors generally confer lower risk.
years
Donor height
Height in centimetres. Smaller donors tend to have higher KDRI.
cm
Donor weight
Weight in kilograms. The KDRI model includes an effect for weight < 80 kg.
kg
History of hypertension
Any history of treated hypertension in the donor.
History of diabetes
Known diabetes mellitus in the donor.
Cause of death
The current KDRI model distinguishes cerebrovascular accident (CVA/stroke) from other causes.
Terminal serum creatinine
Final serum creatinine before procurement, in mg/dL.
mg/dL
Donation after circulatory death (DCD)
Was this a DCD donor (vs standard brain-dead donor)?
Result

KDRI (Rao, donor-only, unscaled):

KDRI (scaled to median 2023 donor ≈1.0):

Approximate KDPI: % ()

Estimated single-kidney graft survival (adult, US 2013–2023 averages):
• 1 year: %  |  5 years: %  |  10 years: %

Enter all donor fields and click “Calculate KDPI” to see the approximate KDPI and expected graft survival at 1, 5 and 10 years. Values reflect population averages, not individual guarantees.

This tool uses the 2018–2021 donor-only KDRI coefficients without race or HCV terms, and a simplified mapping from scaled KDRI to KDPI and survival based on 2023 US donor data. Official KDPI values for allocation are computed by OPTN/UNOS using yearly updated reference distributions.

The Kidney Donor Profile Index (KDPI) is a numerical score (0–100%) that summarises the expected quality and longevity of a deceased-donor kidney compared with other kidneys recovered in the U.S. in a recent reference year.

It is derived in two steps:

  1. Kidney Donor Risk Index (KDRI) – a Cox model-based relative risk of graft failure using donor-only factors:
    • Age
    • Height
    • Weight
    • History of hypertension
    • History of diabetes
    • Cause of death (CVA vs other)
    • Serum creatinine
    • Donation after circulatory death (DCD) status
    Since October 2024, race and donor HCV status were removed from the model to improve equity and reflect current treatment options.
  2. Mapping KDRI → KDPI – the KDRI is scaled so that 1.0 corresponds to the median donor, then mapped to a percentile based on all deceased donors from the prior year. A KDPI of 80% means the donor kidney has higher expected graft-failure risk than 80% of kidneys recovered that year.

Lower KDPI = better expected kidney longevity. For example, recent OPTN data show that single kidneys with KDPI around 20% have substantially better 10-year graft survival than those with KDPI ≥ 80–90%.

What KDPI is used for

KDPI is central to U.S. kidney allocation policy and clinical decision-making:

  • Helps match “longer-lasting” kidneys (KDPI ≤20%) to younger recipients.
  • Helps counsel patients about trade-offs between waiting for a “better kidney” vs accepting a higher KDPI organ now.
  • Provides a continuous measure of donor kidney quality, improving on the old Expanded Criteria Donor (ECD) vs Standard Criteria Donor split.

However, KDPI alone explains only a moderate amount of outcome variation (c-statistic ≈0.60), because recipient factors, surgical factors, and centre performance also matter.

⚠️ Important: KDPI is not an exact prediction of years of graft function for an individual patient.
It gives an average survival pattern for kidneys with similar KDPI, across large cohorts.

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