Scientific Reports (Dec 2020)

Psychosocial risk factors for impaired health-related quality of life in living kidney donors: results from the ELIPSY prospective study

  • Ana Menjivar,
  • Xavier Torres,
  • Marti Manyalich,
  • Ingela Fehrman-Ekholm,
  • Christina Papachristou,
  • Erika de Sousa-Amorim,
  • David Paredes,
  • Christian Hiesse,
  • Levent Yucetin,
  • Federico Oppenheimer,
  • Entela Kondi,
  • Josep Maria Peri,
  • Niclas Kvarnström,
  • Chloë Ballesté,
  • Leonidio Dias,
  • Inês C. Frade,
  • Alice Lopes,
  • Fritz Diekmann,
  • Ignacio Revuelta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-78032-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Living kidney donors’ follow-up is usually focused on the assessment of the surgical and medical outcomes. Whilst the psychosocial follow-up is advocated in literature. It is still not entirely clear which exact psychosocial factors are related to a poor psychosocial outcome of donors. The aim of our study is to prospectively assess the donors’ psychosocial risks factors to impaired health-related quality of life at 1-year post-donation and link their psychosocial profile before donation with their respective outcomes. The influence of the recipient’s medical outcomes on their donor’s psychosocial outcome was also examined. Sixty donors completed a battery of standardized psychometric instruments (quality of life, mental health, coping strategies, personality, socio-economic status), and ad hoc items regarding the donation process (e.g., motivations for donation, decision-making, risk assessment, and donor-recipient relationship). Donors’ 1-year psychosocial follow-up was favorable and comparable with the general population. So far, cluster-analysis identified a subgroup of donors (28%) with a post-donation reduction of their health-related quality of life. This subgroup expressed comparatively to the rest, the need for more pre-donation information regarding surgery risks, and elevated fear of losing the recipient and commitment to stop their suffering.