Long-term prognosis after kidney donation: a propensity score matched comparison of living donors and non-donors from two population cohorts

Author:

Janki ShiromaniORCID,Dehghan AbbasORCID,van de Wetering JacquelineORCID,Steyerberg Ewout W.ORCID,Klop Karel W. J.ORCID,Kimenai Hendrikus J. A. N.ORCID,Rizopoulos DimitrisORCID,Hoorn Ewout J.ORCID,Stracke Sylvia,Weimar WillemORCID,Völzke HenryORCID,Hofman AlbertORCID,Ijzermans Jan N. M.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Live donor nephrectomy is a safe procedure. However, long-term donor prognosis is debated, necessitating high-quality studies. Methods A follow-up study of 761 living kidney donors was conducted, who visited the outpatient clinic and were propensity score matched and compared to 1522 non-donors from population-based cohort studies. Primary outcome was kidney function. Secondary outcomes were BMI (kg/m2), incidences of hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular events, cardiovascular and overall mortality, and quality of life. Results Median follow-up after donation was 8.0 years. Donors had an increase in serum creatinine of 26 μmol/l (95% CI 24–28), a decrease in eGFR of 27 ml/min/1.73 m2 (95% CI − 29 to − 26), and an eGFR decline of 32% (95% CI 30–33) as compared to non-donors. There was no difference in outcomes between the groups for ESRD, microalbuminuria, BMI, incidence of diabetes or cardiovascular events, and mortality. A lower risk of new-onset hypertension (OR 0.45, 95% CI 0.33–0.62) was found among donors. The EQ-5D health-related scores were higher among donors, whereas the SF-12 physical and mental component scores were lower. Conclusion Loss of kidney mass after live donation does not translate into negative long-term outcomes in terms of morbidity and mortality compared to non-donors. Trial registration Dutch Trial Register NTR3795.

Funder

Fonds NutsOhra

Stichting Coolsingel

Nierstichting

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Epidemiology

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