Diagnostic Code 7531 · 38 CFR §4.115b
DC 7531 covers kidney transplantation, which is performed when both kidneys have failed (end-stage renal disease). The VA provides a 100% rating following transplant, with reevaluation after a period of stability. Veterans may require kidney transplant due to conditions connected to military service: diabetes damaging the kidneys, hypertension, toxic exposures, chronic infections, or direct kidney trauma during service.
| Rating | Criteria |
|---|---|
| 100% | Mandatory 100% rating for one year following hospital discharge from the kidney transplant. Continues beyond one year if the veteran requires regular dialysis or has significant transplant complications. |
| 80% | Persistent edema and albuminuria with BUN 40 to 80 mg%, creatinine 4 to 8 mg%, or generalized poor health characterized by lethargy, weakness, anorexia, weight loss, or limitation of exertion. Used after the initial 100% period when residual symptoms are severe. |
| 60% | Constant albuminuria with some edema, definite decrease in kidney function, or hypertension at least 40% disabling under DC 7101. Applies when post-transplant function shows measurable decline. |
| 30% | Minimum rating following the initial 100% period. Reflects the lifelong need for immunosuppressive medication to prevent rejection. Veterans cannot be rated below 30% as long as immunosuppressants are required. |
Surgical records documenting the transplant are the primary evidence. Records of the underlying kidney disease connecting to service establish the chain of causation. Post-transplant kidney function tests show graft performance. Records of immunosuppressive medication regimens demonstrate ongoing treatment needs. Documentation of any transplant complications supports additional claims.
The 100% rating lasts for at least one year after transplant, often longer. After the evaluation period, the rating is reduced based on how well the transplant is functioning. However, the minimum is typically 30% because you will need lifelong immunosuppressive medication. Any complications keep the rating higher.
Yes. Anti-rejection medications like tacrolimus, mycophenolate, and prednisone have significant side effects: new-onset diabetes, hypertension, bone density loss, increased infection risk, and others. Each of these can be claimed as a secondary condition caused by the medication required for your service-connected transplant.