| Literature DB >> 29109691 |
Iris Pollmann1, Faikah Gueler2, Marie Mikuteit1,2,3, Mariel Nöhre1, Nicolas Richter4, Karin Weissenborn3, Martina de Zwaan1.
Abstract
Since living kidney donors have repeatedly been shown to be mentally more healthy compared to the general population, they might also exhibit more adaptive personality characteristics. We investigated the personality traits of 315 living kidney donors (202 female and 113 male donors) on average 7.1 years after donation using the NEO-Five Factor Inventory, a frequently used personality inventory measuring the "big five" dimensions of personality (neuroticism, extraversion, openness, agreeableness, and conscientiousness). In addition, levels of depression, anxiety, and fatigue were assessed with the Patient Health Questionnaire-Depression Scale, GAD-7, and Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory. Kidney donors showed more adaptive personality traits with higher agreeableness and lower neuroticism scores compared to the German general population. This was even more pronounced in living kidney donors with a high motivation to donate again (non-regreters). Scores for depression, anxiety, and fatigue did not differ from general population values and were significantly correlated with most personality dimensions. The more adaptive personality characteristics of living kidney donors might either be a selection effect or the consequence of the experience of donation and improved health of the close relative. Regardless of the causal relationship, adaptive personality traits might positively influence both physical and psychosocial well-being of the donor. Longitudinal studies should investigate if living donation might lead to persistent adaptive changes in personality traits.Entities:
Keywords: NEO-Five Factor Inventory; anxiety; depression; fatigue; living kidney donors; personality
Year: 2017 PMID: 29109691 PMCID: PMC5660284 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2017.00210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1Study flow chart.
Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of the study sample for the total sample and separate for male and female donors; comparison between sexes.
| Characteristic | All survey respondents | Female donors | Male donors | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| χ2-test | ||||
| Current age, mean (SD); range | 55.9 (8.0); 29–69 | 55.8 (8.0); 33–69 | 56.1 (8.1); 29–69 | ns |
| Educational level; ≥12 years of school attendance, % ( | 27.6 (87) | 24.8 (50) | 32.7 (37) | ns |
| Employment % ( | ns | |||
| Paid employment | 72.1 (220) | 71.2 (138) | 73.9 (82) | |
| Retired/unemployed | 27.8 (85) | 28.2 (56) | 26.1 (29) | |
| Partnership % ( | 83.4 (262) | 82.6 (166) | 85.0 (96) | ns |
| Relationship to recipient, % ( | χ2 = 9.973, df = 4, | |||
| Spouse | 38.4 (121) | 44.1 (89) | 28.3 (32) | |
| Child | 42.5 (134) | 39.6 (80) | 47.8 (54) | |
| Sibling | 11.1 (35) | 8.4 (17) | 15.9 (18) | |
| Other relative | 5.4 (17) | 5.9 (12) | 4.4 (5) | |
| Friends | 2.2 (7) | 2.0 (4) | 2.7 (3) | |
| Undisclosed | 0.3 (1) | 0 (0) | 0.9 (1) | |
| Age at donation, mean (SD); range | 48.8 (8.8); 25–68 | 48.8 (8.8); 25–68 | 48.8 (8.7); 27–66 | ns |
| Years since donation, mean (SD); range | 7.1 (5.2); 1–29 | 7.0 (5.2); 1–26 | 7.3 (5.1); 1–29 | ns |
| Years since donation % ( | ns | |||
| <2 | 13.3 (42) | 14.9 (30) | 10.6 (12) | |
| 2–6 | 40.6 (128) | 39.1 (79) | 43.4 (49) | |
| 7–11 | 27.0 (85) | 28.2 (57) | 24.8 (28) | |
| >11 | 19.0 (60) | 17.8 (36) | 21.2 (24) | |
| Would you donate again?% ( | 75.9 (239) | 77.7 (157) | 72.6 (82) | ns |
| Definitely yes (non-regreters) | ||||
| Likely | 13.7 (43) | 12.9 (26) | 15.0 (17) | |
| Unsure | 4.8 (15) | 4.5 (9) | 5.3 (6) | |
| Not likely | 3.2 (10) | 2.5 (5) | 4.4 (5) | |
| Definitely no | 1.6 (5) | 1.5 (3) | 1.8 (2) | |
| Not answered | 1.0 (3) | 1.0 (2) | 0.9 (1) | |
| How is your relationship to the recipient? % ( | ns | |||
| Very good | 61.3 (193) | 60.9 (123) | 61.9 (70) | |
| Good | 25.1 (79) | 24.8 (50) | 25.7 (29) | |
| Moderate | 6.3 (20) | 6.4 (13) | 6.2 (7) | |
| Bad | 1.0 (3) | 0.5 (1) | 1.8 (2) | |
| Very bad | 0.6 (2) | 1.0 (2) | 0.0 (0) | |
| Not answered | 5.7 (18) | 6.4 (13) | 4.4 (5) | |
| Subjective health % ( | ns | |||
| Very good | 19.4 (61) | 21.3 (43) | 15.9 (18) | |
| Good | 50.5 (159) | 48.5 (98) | 54.0 (61) | |
| Moderate | 22.9 (72) | 22.3 (45) | 23.9 (27) | |
| Bad | 5.7 (18) | 5.9 (12) | 5.3 (6) | |
| Very bad | 0.6 (2) | 0.5 (1) | 0.9 (1) | |
| Not answered | 10 (3) | 1.5 (3) | – | |
| GAD-7 cutoff ≥10, % ( | 7.6 (24) | 8.4 (17) | 6.2 (7) | ns |
| Patient Health Questionnaire-Depression Scale cutoff ≥10, % ( | 10.2 (32) | 11.4 (23) | 8.0 (9) | ns |
Figure 2Relationship to the organ recipient by sex of the donor (percent donors).
Means (SD), medians [interquartile ranges (IQR)], and sample sizes of psychosocial assessment instruments for the total sample and separate for male and female donors; comparison between sexes.
| All survey respondents | Female donors | Male donors | Mann–Whitney | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | Sample size | Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | Sample size | Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | Sample size | ||
| Depression (PHQ-9) | 3.9 (4.1) | 3 (4) | 315 | 4.4 (4.1) | 3 (4) | 202 | 3.0 (3.9) | 2 (4) | 113 | |
| Anxiety (GAD-7) | 3.4 (3.7) | 2 (4) | 315 | 3.7 (3.7) | 3 (4) | 202 | 2.7 (3.6) | 2 (3.5) | 113 | |
| NEO-neuroticism | 43.7 (11.6) | 45 (17.75) | 312 | 44.7 (11.3) | 45 (16) | 201 | 42.0 (12.0) | 41 (19) | 111 | |
| NEO-extraversion | 51.8 (11.0) | 52 (13) | 313 | 50.8 (10.9) | 51 (13) | 201 | 53.6 (11.1) | 54 (13) | 112 | |
| NEO-openness | 45.8 (9.4) | 45 (13) | 312 | 45.0 (9.1) | 44 (13) | 201 | 47.1 (9.8) | 47 (13) | 111 | |
| NEO-agreeableness | 54.5 (11.4) | 56 (17) | 312 | 54.0 (10.7) | 56 (17) | 201 | 55.3 (12.5) | 57 (18) | 111 | |
| NEO-conscientiousness | 55.0 (10.7) | 55 (13.75) | 312 | 54.9 (11.1) | 55 (14.5) | 201 | 55.4 (9.9) | 54 (12) | 111 | |
| MFI-general | 9.2 (4.2) | 9 (6) | 305 | 9.6 (4.3) | 9 (6) | 194 | 8.6 (3.9) | 8 (6) | 111 | |
| MFI-physical | 8.3 (3.9) | 7.5 (6) | 304 | 8.4 (4.0) | 8 (6) | 193 | 8.1 (3.9) | 7 (6) | 111 | |
| MFI-mental | 7.8 (4.0) | 7 (6) | 308 | 8.0 (4.2) | 7 (6) | 196 | 7.5 (3.8) | 6.5 (5) | 112 | |
| MFI-activity | 7.7 (3.8) | 7 (5) | 304 | 7.9 (4.1) | 7 (6) | 193 | 7.3 (3.2) | 6 (4) | 111 | |
| MFI-motivation | 7.2 (3.3) | 6 (4) | 307 | 7.3 (3.5) | 6 (5) | 195 | 7.1 (2.9) | 6 (4) | 112 | |
PHQ-9, depression subscale of the Patient Health Questionnaire; GAD-7, Generalized Anxiety Subscale of the Patient Health Questionnaire; NEO, NEO-Five Factor Inventory; MFI, Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory-20.
Figure 3Median T scores on the NEO-Five Factor Inventory by sex of the donor (>55 is higher than average, <45 is lower than average).
Figure 4Median T scores on the NEO-Five Factor Inventory and regret regarding donation by sex (>55 is higher than average, <45 is lower than average).
Prevalence of depressive symptoms (Patient Health Questionnaire-Depression Scale ≥10) in percent with 95% confidence intervals (CI) for living kidney donors and comparison with a general population sample of 7,524 individuals Busch et al. (16).
| General population % (95% CI) | Kidney donors % (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Women | 10.2 (8.9–11.5) | 11.4 (7.4–15.6) |
| Men | 6.1 (5.2–7.2) | 8.0 (3.4–13.0) |
| Total | 8.1 (7.3–9.1) | 10.2 (6.6–13.6) |
Figure 5Mean scores and SDs on the Patient Health Questionnaire-Depression Scale (PHQ-9), GAD-7, and Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory subscales by sex. **Mann–Whitney U-test: p ≤ 0.001. PHQ-9, Depression subscale of the Patient Health Questionnaire; GAD-7, Generalized Anxiety Subscale of the Patient Health Questionnaire; MFI, Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory-20.
Pearson correlations between NEO-Five Factor Inventory scales (median T scores) and levels of fatigue, anxiety, and depression.
| MFI general | MFI physical | MFI activity | MFI motivation | MFI mental | GAD anxiety | PHQ depression | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NEO neuroticism | 0.540 | 0.523 | 0.520 | 0.547 | 0.535 | 0.639 | 0.614 | |
| 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | ||
| 302 | 303 | 301 | 304 | 305 | 312 | 312 | ||
| NEO extraversion | −0.474 | −0.487 | −0.457 | −0.510 | −0.433 | −0.459 | −0.509 | |
| 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | ||
| 303 | 303 | 302 | 305 | 306 | 313 | 313 | ||
| NEO openness | −0.058 | −0.008 | −0.011 | −0.103 | −0.089 | −0.047 | −0.070 | |
| 0.312 | 0.896 | 0.852 | 0.073 | 0.121 | 0.413 | 0.215 | ||
| 302 | 303 | 301 | 304 | 305 | 312 | 312 | ||
| NEO agreeableness | −0.217 | −0.200 | −0.166 | −0.233 | −0.156 | −0.322 | −0.266 | |
| 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.004 | 0.000 | 0.006 | 0.000 | 0.000 | ||
| 302 | 303 | 301 | 304 | 305 | 312 | 312 | ||
| NEO conscientiousness | −0.295 | −0.347 | −0.464 | −0.416 | −0.393 | −0.330 | −0.372 | |
| 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | ||
| 302 | 303 | 301 | 304 | 305 | 312 | 312 | ||
Pearson correlations two-sided.
PHQ-9, Depression subscale of the Patient Health Questionnaire; GAD-7, Generalized Anxiety Subscale of the Patient Health Questionnaire; NEO, NEO-Five Factor Inventory; MFI, Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory-20.