Donor's long‐term quality of life following living‐donor lobar lung transplantation

Author:

Fujii Kento1,Tanaka Shin1ORCID,Ishihara Megumi1,Matsubara Kei1,Hashimoto Kohei1,Okahara Shuji2ORCID,Shien Kazuhiko1,Suzawa Ken1,Miyoshi Kentaroh1ORCID,Otani Shinji3,Yamamoto Hiromasa1,Okazaki Mikio1,Sugimoto Seiichiro1ORCID,Yamane Masaomi4,Toyooka Shinichi1

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Thoracic Surgery and Organ Transplant Center Okayama University Hospital Okayama Japan

2. Department of Anesthesiology and Resuscitology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences Okayama University Okayama Japan

3. Department of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery Ehime University Hospital Ehime Japan

4. Thoracic Surgery Shimane University Hospital Shimane Japan

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionLiving‐donor lobar lung transplantation is an alternative procedure to deceased donation lung transplantation. It involves graft donation from healthy donors; however, only a few reports have discussed its long‐term prognosis in living lung donors and their associated health‐related quality of life. This study aimed to examine living lung donors’ health‐related quality of life.MethodsIn our cross‐sectional survey of living lung donors, we assessed health‐related quality of life‐based on three key aspects (physical, mental, and social health) using the 36‐Item Short Form Health Survey. We also evaluated chronic postoperative pain and postoperative breathlessness using the numeric rating scale and the modified Medical Research Council Dyspnea scale, respectively.ResultsWe obtained consent from 117 of 174 living lung donors. The average scores of the living lung donors on the 36‐Item Short Form Health Survey were higher than the national average. However, some donors had poorer physical, mental, and social health, with lower summary scores than the national averages. Low mental component summary predictors included donor age (<40 years; odds ratio = 10.2; p < .001) and recipient age (<18 years; odds ratio = 2.73; p < .032). Low role‐social component summary predictors included high lung allocation score (≥50; odds ratio = 3.94, p < .002) and recipient death (odds ratio = 3.64; p = .005). There were no predictors for a physical component summary. Additionally, many donors did not complain of pain or dyspnea.ConclusionsLiving lung donors maintained an acceptable long‐term health‐related quality of life after surgery. Potential donors should be informed of relevant risk factors, and high‐risk donors should receive appropriate support.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Transplantation

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