Abstract

Due to organ shortage, living kidney donation is gaining increasing importance. Medical progress enables a successful transplantation between unrelated individuals, even individuals with AB0-incompatibilities. Spouses are the largest group of living kidney donors. The aim of this study was to assess partnership status and partnership satisfaction in living kidney donors. In the cross-sectional study we investigated 361 living kidney donors. The time since donation ranged between 1 and 38 years. The partnership satisfaction was assessed with the German version of the Quality of Marriage Index. We compared the donor sample with a representative German population sample (n = 1995). In addition, we compared donors who have donated to their partner (spouse donors) to those who have donated to someone else (non-spouse donors). In comparison to the population sample significantly more kidney donors were living in a relationship (82 vs. 60%). Most donors reported an unchanged (76.6%) or improved (20.5%) relationship to the recipient since transplantation. A significantly higher partnership satisfaction could be found in the donor sample compared to the population sample which was mainly due to a higher partnership satisfaction of the spouse donors compared to the non-spouse donors. High partnership satisfaction in living kidney donors might be an indicator for a successful selection process before transplantation. Alternatively, kidney donation might have a stabilizing or even positive impact on the partnership. Due to the design of our study causative interpretations cannot be made. Therefore, prospective studies are required to assess partnership satisfaction before and after living kidney donation.

Highlights

  • Kidney transplantation is the preferential treatment for end-stage renal disease (ESRD) [1]

  • The aim of this study was [1] to compare partnership status and partnership satisfaction between living kidney donors (LKD) and a representative population sample of the same age range and [2] to compare partnership satisfaction between donors having donated to their partner with those having donated to someone else using the German version of the Quality of Marriage Index (QMI-D) [17, 18]

  • The partnership satisfaction evaluated with the QMI-D is significantly higher in the donor sample compared to the population sample

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Summary

Introduction

Kidney transplantation is the preferential treatment for end-stage renal disease (ESRD) [1]. A growing number of patients are on the waiting list for organ transplantation. At the same time in 2017 post-mortal organ donations have reached the lowest level in 20 years [2]. In Germany 9.7 donors per 1 million inhabitants have been registered in 2017 [2]. This circumstance leads to an increasing importance of living kidney donation. Several advantages are associated with living kidney donations such as shorter ischemia time, superior organ quality, and a longer graft survival [4]. The waiting time for postmortal donation lies on average between 6 and 7 years, whereas patients with blood group 0 often have to wait longer [5]

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