Early Complications in Kidney Donors and Course of Health-related Quality of Life 12 mo After Donation: An Analysis of the Swiss Organ Living-Donor Health Registry.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_92321B6AB9A0
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Early Complications in Kidney Donors and Course of Health-related Quality of Life 12 mo After Donation: An Analysis of the Swiss Organ Living-Donor Health Registry.
Journal
Transplantation direct
ISSN
2373-8731 (Print)
ISSN-L
2373-8731
Publication state
Published
Issued date
11/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
10
Number
11
Pages
e1716
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
Since 1998, the Swiss Organ Living-Donor Health Registry (SOL-DHR) has recorded peri- and postoperative complications of living kidney (LK) donors, as reported by all Swiss transplant centers and has collected follow-up data prospectively.
We analyzed the early complications of 2379 consecutive individuals who donated a kidney between January 1998 and June 2022 and assessed their health-related quality of life (HRQoL) 1 y after donation.
In total, 447 early complications in 404/2379 LK donors (17.0%) were reported to the SOL-DHR. The frequency of donors with major complications (ie, Dindo-Clavien classification 3/4) was 2.4%. In total, 31 donors needed reoperation, and in 13/31 (42%), donors reoperation was necessary because of bleeding complications. Independent risk factors for major early complications were older donor age (P = 0.005) and type of surgical approach (ie, the laparoscopic retroperitoneal compared with laparoscopic transabdominal surgery; P = 0.01), but not sex. We observed a U-shaped association of body mass index, where very low/high body mass indexes had higher odds of major early complications, without reaching statistical significance. Although HRQoL was affected by kidney donation, 96.5% of donors indicated that they would donate their kidney again. The only independent risk factor for low HRQoL based on mental health scores was worsening EB after living kidney donation (P < 0.0001).
Overall, living kidney donation is a safe procedure, however, donor age and type of surgical approach affect the risk of complications. A decline in emotional bonding with the recipient after donation may worsen the quality of life of the donor.
We analyzed the early complications of 2379 consecutive individuals who donated a kidney between January 1998 and June 2022 and assessed their health-related quality of life (HRQoL) 1 y after donation.
In total, 447 early complications in 404/2379 LK donors (17.0%) were reported to the SOL-DHR. The frequency of donors with major complications (ie, Dindo-Clavien classification 3/4) was 2.4%. In total, 31 donors needed reoperation, and in 13/31 (42%), donors reoperation was necessary because of bleeding complications. Independent risk factors for major early complications were older donor age (P = 0.005) and type of surgical approach (ie, the laparoscopic retroperitoneal compared with laparoscopic transabdominal surgery; P = 0.01), but not sex. We observed a U-shaped association of body mass index, where very low/high body mass indexes had higher odds of major early complications, without reaching statistical significance. Although HRQoL was affected by kidney donation, 96.5% of donors indicated that they would donate their kidney again. The only independent risk factor for low HRQoL based on mental health scores was worsening EB after living kidney donation (P < 0.0001).
Overall, living kidney donation is a safe procedure, however, donor age and type of surgical approach affect the risk of complications. A decline in emotional bonding with the recipient after donation may worsen the quality of life of the donor.
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
25/10/2024 13:38
Last modification date
26/10/2024 6:12