Abstract

Hyperuricaemia plays a role in the pathogenesis of obesity and related metabolic disorders. The aim of this study to investigate the relationship between pre-donation serum uric acid (SUA) level and obesity development after nephrectomy in living kidney donors. Living donors of kidney transplants between 1998 and 2019 were evaluated. Donors with less than 1year of follow-up were excluded from the study. The participants were divided into two groups according to last control body mass index (BMI) (obese; ≥30kg/m2 and nonobese; <30kg/m2 ) and median baseline SUA level (<4.6mg/dL and ≥4.6mg/dL). In the included 240 donors, the mean follow-up was 50±44 (12-216) months. The mean age was 47±11 (19-82) years, and 46.6% of donors were male. At last control, the percentage of obese donors had increased significantly compared to pre-donation time (22.5% vs 33.8%; P<.001) and last control obese donors had both higher baseline SUA (5.1±1.4 vs 4.5±1.2; P<.01) and BMI (30.7±2.6 vs 24.8±3.0; P<.001). Cox regression analysis showed that there is an independent relationship between the baseline SUA level and development of obesity (odds ratio: 1.30 [CI; 1.12-1.50]; P<.001). In Kaplan-Meier analysis, the development of obesity was significantly higher in kidney donors with high SUA level. Living kidney donors (LKD) have a tendency to obesity after nephrectomy. Preoperative serum uric acid level gives important information in LKDs that it could foresee the development of obesity after donation.

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