| Literature DB >> 29631543 |
Barbara Suwelack1, Viktoriya Wörmann2, Klaus Berger3, Joachim Gerß4, Heiner Wolters5, Frank Vitinius6, Markus Burgmer2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Over the last years, living kidney donation (LKD) has been established for patients with endstage renal failure as an alternative to post mortem donation, which is limited by organ scarcity and long lasting waiting periods. From an ethical perspective, the increase in LKD requires that donors' physical, psychological, and social harm has to be minimized as much as possible and the risk should not exceed the generally expected consequences of nephrectomy. Despite of numerous, mainly retrospective studies about the postoperative outcome of LKD over the last years from different countries, it becomes apparent that there is a lack of comprehensive prospective multicenter research in this field worldwide. Therefore, the main aim of the study is to examine the physical and psychosocial outcome of living kidney donors in a prospective design before and after transplantation in an interdisciplinary approach (surgery, nephrology, psychosocial medicine). METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29631543 PMCID: PMC5891992 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-018-0871-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Inclusion and exclusion criteria of the SoLKiD study for living kidney donors
| Inclusion criteria | • Living kidney donors before upcoming nephrectomy |
| • Age > 17 years | |
| • Informed consent | |
| • Native language German, Turkish, Russian | |
| Exclusion criteria | • Refusal to participate |
| • Not living in Germany | |
| • Lack of reading comprehension in the native language |
Fig. 1Time points of measurement in the SoLKiD study
Questionnaires used in the SoLKiD study for living kidney donors
| Questionnaire | Short description | Scales |
|---|---|---|
| SF-36 [ | Standardized, generic instrument for the detection of health-related quality of life in the general population and in different patient groups. 8 dimensions can be conceptually summarized in two components: “physical health” and “mental health”. | Physical functioning, physical role function, bodily pain, general health, vitality, social functioning, emotional role function, and mental health; summary scales: physical health summary score, mental health summary score |
| MFI [ | Standardized self-assessment tool that measures perceived tiredness (fatigue) in extent, nature, and intensity. The values can be compared inter- and intra-individually. | General fatigue, physical fatigue, reduced activity, reduced motivation, mental fatigue |
| PSS-10 [ | Instrument for the measurement of the subjective stress rating and evaluation of the global perceived stress. It measures a degree of frequency, how the answerers grade their lives as unpredictable, uncontrollable, and overburdening. | Global degree of frequency of perceived stress |
| PHQ-D Short Form [ | The questionnaire was developed to facilitate the detection and diagnosis of the most common mental disorders in primary medicine. In addition to questions about mental disorders, there are also items for psychosocial function ability, stressors, critical life events and - for women - menstruation, pregnancy, and childbirth. In addition to the categorical diagnosis of mental disorder, severity ratings for the areas depression, somatic symptoms and stress can be provided (continuous diagnostics). | The short form, which is used in the present study, refers to the following scales: Depression (PHQ-9); Anxiety (GAD-7); Somatization (PHQ-15). For these scales, the formation of a separate scale for each point value (scores) for measuring the severity is possible. |
| CERQ [ | Instrument for detecting the different components of habitual cognitive emotion regulation. It comprises nine dimensions, which measure the possible mental responses to an aversive event and thus triggered emotions. | Catastrophizing, self-blame, rumination or focus on thought, positive reappraisal, positive refocusing, refocusing on planning, other-blame, putting into perspective, acceptance |