Transplant International (Nov 2023)

Psychological Impact of Living Kidney Donation: A Systematic Review by the EAU—YAU Kidney Transplant Working Group

  • Valentine Cazauvieilh,
  • Valérie Moal,
  • Thomas Prudhomme,
  • Alessio Pecoraro,
  • Alberto Piana,
  • Riccardo Campi,
  • Riccardo Campi,
  • Vital Hevia,
  • Angelo Territo,
  • Romain Boissier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/ti.2023.11827
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 36

Abstract

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We performed a systematic literature review of the psychological impact on donors of living kidney donation. We conducted a literature review in PubMed/Medline according to PRISMA guidelines which included both qualitative (based on interviews) and quantitative studies (based on standardized questionnaire). There were 15 quantitative studies and 8 qualitative studies with 2,732 donors. Given that the methodologies of qualitative and quantitative studies are fundamentally different, we narratively synthetized results of studies according to four axes: quality of life, anxiety/depression, consequences of donation on the donor/recipient relationship, overall satisfaction and regret. The quantitative studies reported that donor quality of life remained unchanged or improved. Donor regret rates were very low and donor-recipient relationships also remained unchanged or improved. Qualitative studies reported more complex donation experiences: one can regret donation and still decide to recommend it as in a social desirability bias. In both study types, donor-recipient relationships were closer but qualitative studies reported that post-donation rebonding was required. The qualitative studies therefore highlighted the psychological complexity of donation for donors, showing that living donation impacts the donor’s life whether it is successful or not. A better understanding of the impact of donation on donors could provide better care for donors.

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