Self-Reported Incident Hypertension and Long-Term Kidney Function in Living Kidney Donors Compared with Healthy Nondonors

Author:

Holscher Courtenay M.,Haugen Christine E.ORCID,Jackson Kyle R.ORCID,Garonzik Wang Jacqueline M.,Waldram Madeleine M.,Bae Sunjae,Locke Jayme E.,Reed Rhiannon D.,Lentine Krista L.,Gupta GauravORCID,Weir Matthew R.,Friedewald John J.ORCID,Verbesey Jennifer,Cooper MatthewORCID,Segev Dorry L.ORCID,Massie Allan B.

Abstract

Background and objectivesThe risk of hypertension attributable to living kidney donation remains unknown as does the effect of developing postdonation hypertension on subsequent eGFR. We sought to understand the association between living kidney donation, hypertension, and long-term eGFR by comparing donors with a cohort of healthy nondonors.Design, setting, participants, & measurementsWe compared 1295 living kidney donors with median 6 years of follow-up with a weighted cohort of 8233 healthy nondonors. We quantified the risk of self-reported hypertension using a parametric survival model. We examined the association of hypertension with yearly change in eGFR using multilevel linear regression and clustering by participant, with an interaction term for race.ResultsKidney donation was independently associated with a 19% higher risk of hypertension (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.19; 95% confidence interval, 1.01 to 1.41; P=0.04); this association did not vary by race (interaction P=0.60). For white and black nondonors, there was a mean decline in eGFR (−0.4 and −0.3 ml/min per year, respectively) that steepened after incident hypertension (−0.8 and −0.9 ml/min per year, respectively; both P<0.001). For white and black kidney donors, there was a mean increase in eGFR after donation (+0.4 and +0.6 ml/min per year, respectively) that plateaued after incident hypertension (0 and −0.2 ml/min per year, respectively; P=0.07 and P=0.01, respectively, after hypertension).ConclusionsKidney donors are at higher risk of hypertension than similar healthy nondonors, regardless of race. Donors who developed hypertension had a plateau in the usual postdonation increase of eGFR.

Funder

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

National Institute on Aging

American College of Surgeons

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Epidemiology

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