| Literature DB >> 33853805 |
Andrea Gibbons1,2, Janet Bayfield2,3, Marco Cinnirella4, Heather Draper5, Rachel J Johnson6, Gabriel C Oniscu7, Rommel Ravanan8, Charles Tomson9, Paul Roderick10, Wendy Metcalfe7, John L R Forsythe7,11, Christopher Dudley8, Christopher J E Watson12,13, J Andrew Bradley12,13, Clare Bradley14,3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine quality of life (QoL) and other patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in kidney transplant recipients and those awaiting transplantation.Entities:
Keywords: chronic renal failure; dialysis; nephrology; patient-reported outcome measures; quality of life; renal transplantation; transplant medicine; transplant surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33853805 PMCID: PMC8098938 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-047263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) diagram. ATTOM, Access to Transplantation and Transplant Outcome Measures; DDKT, DD kidney transplantation; LDKT, LD kidney transplantation; m, month.
Summary of baseline demographic characteristics of groups at recruitment
| Variable | Wait-list group (n=165) | DD recipients (n=104) | LD recipients (n=94) | P value |
| M (SE) | M (SE) | M (SE) | ||
| Age* in years | 50.7 (1.6) | 51.1 (1.3) | 43.9 (1.4) | <0.001 |
| Time on waiting list in days | 980 (124.9) | 953 (284.9) | 990 (414.4)† | 0.995 |
| Sociodemographic variables | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | P value |
| Age* | <0.001 | |||
| 18–34 | 25 (15.1) | 12 (11.5) | 29 (30.9) | |
| 35–49 | 46 (27.9) | 32 (30.8) | 32 (34.0) | |
| 50–64 | 66 (40.0) | 41 (39.4) | 27 (28.7) | |
| 65–75 | 28 (17.0) | 19 (18.3) | 6 (6.4) | |
| Sex: Female | 59 (35.8) | 40 (38.5) | 34 (36.2) | 0.949 |
| Ethnicity | 0.411 | |||
| White | 134 (81.2) | 84 (80.8) | 85 (90.4) | |
| Black | 15 (9.1) | 10 (9.6) | 5 (5.3) | |
| Asian | 1 (0.6) | 1 (1.0) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Chinese | 13 (7.9) | 7 (6.7) | 3 (3.2) | |
| Mixed | 2 (1.2) | 2 (1.9) | 1 (1.1) | |
| Marital status | 0.462 | |||
| Single | 32 (19.4) | 20 (19.2) | 27 (28.7) | |
| Married/living with partner | 98 (59.4) | 63 (60.6) | 60 (63.8) | |
| Divorced/ separated/ widowed | 35 (21.2) | 121 (20.2) | 7 (7.5) | |
| Education | 0.166 | |||
| No qualifications‡ | 32 (19.4) | 16 (15.4) | 8 (8.5) | 0.033 |
| Basic (GCSE/ A level/NVQ 1–3) | 94 (57.0) | 66 (63.5) | 68 (72.3) | |
| Higher (degree/ higher degree/ NVQ 4–5) | 39 (23.6) | 22 (21.1) | 18 (19.2) | |
| Car ownership: Yes | 134 (81.2) | 89 (85.6) | 90 (95.7) | <0.000 |
| Clinical variables | ||||
| Primary renal diagnosis | 0.515 | |||
| Diabetes: Type 1 or 2 | 9 (5.5) | 11 (10.6) | 5 (5.3) | |
| Glomerulonephritis | 50 (30.3) | 32 (30.8) | 42 (44.7) | |
| Interstitial nephritis/ pyelonephritis | 21 (12.7) | 13 (12.5) | 16 (17.0) | |
| Hypertension/ large vessel disease | 10 (6.1) | 8 (7.7) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Cystic/ hereditary/ congenital disease | 47 (28.4) | 19 (18.3) | 14 (14.9) | |
| Other conditions | 28 (17.0) | 21 (20.1) | 17 (18.1) | |
| Comorbid conditions | ||||
| Diabetes | 20 (12.2) | 16 (15.4) | 8 (8.5) | <0.005 |
| Heart disease | 19 (11.6) | 6 (5.8) | 7 (7.4) | 0.006 |
| Heart failure | 6 (3.7) | 4 (3.8) | 0 (0.0) | 0.305 |
| Liver disease | 4 (2.4) | 3 (2.9) | 1 (1.1) | 0.299 |
| Mental health problems | 14 (8.5) | 2 (1.9) | 5 (5.3) | 0.022 |
| Obesity (BMI >30) | 32 (19.5) | 22 (21.2) | 14 (14.9) | 0.600 |
| Previous renal replacement therapy | <0.001 | |||
| No dialysis** | 29 (17.6) | 13 (12.5) | 43 (45.7) | |
| Peritoneal dialysis | 27 (16.4) | 23 (22.1) | 14 (14.9) | |
| Haemodialysis (HD)§ | 109 (66.0) | 68 (65.4) | 37 (39.4) | |
| Central venous catheter | 35 (53.1) | 31 (55.6) | 21 (56.8) | |
| Arteriovenous fistula | 22 (33.3) | 28 (41.2) | 15 (40.5) | |
| Unknown | 9 (13.6) | 9 (13.2) | 1 (2.7) | |
| Previous transplant failure¶ | 47 (28.5) | 12 (11.5) | 13 (13.8) | 0.001 |
| Highly sensitised: Yes | 8 (4.9) | 9 (8.7) | 8 (8.5) | 0.842 |
| Donor related to patient: Yes | – | – | 56 (59.6) | |
| Induction suppression | 0.116 | |||
| None | – | 16 (15.4) | 19 (20.2) | |
| Anti-thymocyte globulin | – | 7 (6.7) | 1 (1.1) | |
| Basiliximab | – | 66 (63.5) | 53 (56.4) | |
| Campath | – | 15 (14.4) | 21 (1.1) | |
| Calcineurin inhibitor maintenance | 0.073 | |||
| Tacrolimus | – | 98 (94.2) | 93 (98.9) | |
| Ciclosporin | – | 6 (5.8) | 1 (1.1) | |
| Anti-proliferative drugs | 0.341 | |||
| None | – | 13 (12.5) | 8 (8.5) | |
| Mycophenolate | – | 70 (67.3) | 54 (57.4) | |
| CellCept | – | 8 (7.7) | 16 (17.0) | |
| Myfortic | – | 7 (6.7) | 10 (10.6) | |
| Azathioprine | – | 6 (5.8) | 6 (6.4) | |
| Steroid maintenance plan | 0.193 | |||
| None | – | 9 (8.7) | 12 (12.8) | |
| Withdraw within 3 months | – | 18 (17.3) | 24 (25.5) | |
| Long-term use | – | 77 (74.0) | 58 (61.7) | |
303132
*LD recipients were younger.
†Figures here reflect only those who were on the WL for a DD transplant before receiving a LD transplant (n=16).
‡Fewer LD recipients reported no educational qualifications.
§More DD recipients and patients on the WL reported being on HD prior to transplantation/listing.
¶WL patients reported more previous transplant failures.
**A larger proportion of LD recipients were transplanted pre-emptively.
BMI, body mass index; DD, deceased-donor transplant; LD, living-donor transplant; M, mean; PROM, patient-reported outcome measure; WL, waiting list group.
Correlations between outcome measures at 12-month follow-up for all participants
| Variable | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | |
| 1 | Generic QoL | – | |||||
| 2 | Renal-dependent QoL | 0.499*** | – | ||||
| 3 | Well-being | 0.740*** | 0.551*** | – | |||
| 4 | Health status (EQ-VAS) | 0.725*** | 0.415*** | 0.652*** | – | ||
| 5 | Health-utility values | 0.674*** | 0.444*** | 0.678*** | 0.612*** | – | |
| 6 | Renal treatment satisfaction (RTSQs) | 0.545*** | 0.420*** | 0.521*** | 0.454*** | 0.364*** | – |
| 7 | Change in treatment satisfaction (RTSQc) | 0.282*** | 0.134* | 0.292*** | 0.293*** | 0.125* | 0.617*** |
*p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001.
EQ-VAS, EuroQoL Visual Analogue Scale; QoL, quality of life; RTSQc, RTSQ change version; RTSQs, Renal Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire status version.
Summary of adjusted means, standard errors and main effects examining cross-sectional differences in groups in patient-reported outcomes at 1 year, controlling for age, previous renal replacement therapy, previous experience of a transplant, education, car ownership and mental health problems
| Wait-list group | DD transplant | LD transplant | F | df | P value | Partial η2 | ||||
| Mean (SE) | 95% CI | Mean (SE) | 95% CI | Mean (SE) | 95% CI | |||||
| Generic QoL*† | 0.4 (0.1) | 0.1 to 0.7 | 1.4 (0.1) | 1.1 to 1.6 | 1.8 (0.1) | 1.5 to 1.9 | 27.6 | 266 | <0.001 | 0.20 |
| Renal-dependent QoL*† | −4.4 (0.3) | −4.9 to −3.9 | −2.7 (0.2) | −3.1 to −2.4 | −1.9 (0.2) | −2.3 to −1.5 | 27.2 | 266 | <0.001 | 0.18 |
| Well-being* | 19.0 (0.9) | 14.3 to 20.8 | 24.9 (0.7) | 23.7 to 26.3 | 27.4 (0.8) | 25.8 to 28.9 | 24.7 | 265 | <0.001 | 0.17 |
| Health status (EQ-VAS)* | 62.4 (2.2) | 58.0 to 66.8 | 77.9 (1.6) | 74.8 to 81.2 | 82.4 (1.9) | 78.7 to 86.1 | 24.1 | 263 | <0.001 | 0.18 |
| Health-utility values* | 0.7 (0.1) | 0.6 to 0.8 | 0.8 (0.1) | 0.8 to 0.9 | 0.9 (0.1) | 0.8 to 0.9 | 13.1 | 259 | <0.001 | 0.11 |
| Renal treatment satisfaction (RTSQs)*† | 58.6 (1.3) | 56.1 to 61.1 | 67.4 (0.9) | 65.5 to 69.2 | 72.6 (1.1) | 70.5 to 74.7 | 34.3 | 265 | <0.001 | 0.21 |
| Change in treatment satisfaction (RTSQc)* | 14.1 (1.7) | 10.8 to 17.4 | 29.2 (1.3) | 26.7 to 31.7 | 30.9 (1.4) | 28.2 to 33.8 | 33.6 | 253 | <0.001 | 0.22 |
Partial η2 is a measure of effect size that measures the proportion of the total variance in a dependent variable that is associated with the membership of different groups defined by an independent variable, in which the effects of other independent variables and interactions are partialled out. Partial η2 is seen as giving small (0.01), medium (0.09) or large (0.25) effect sizes.
*WL group reported worse outcomes compared with DD or LD recipients (p<0.001).
†LD recipients reported better scores than DD recipients (p<0.05).
DD, deceased-donor transplant; EQ-VAS, EuroQoL Visual Analogue Scale; LD, living-donor transplant; M, mean; QoL, quality of life; RTSQc, Renal Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire change version; RTSQs, RTSQ status version; SE, standard error; WL, waiting list.
Summary of adjusted means, standard errors and interaction effects examining differences in those who remained on the waiting list and those who subsequently had a LD or DD transplant, in patient-reported outcomes from pre-transplant to 12 months post-transplant/recruitment to 12 months, controlling for age, previous renal replacement therapy, previous experience of a transplant, education, car ownership and mental health problems
| Generic QoL | Renal-dependent QoL | Well-being | Health status EQ-VAS scores | Health-utility values | Renal treatment satisfaction (RTSQs) | ||
| Recruitment | |||||||
| WL | M (SE) | 0.39 (0.15) | −4.29 (0.27) | 22.94 (0.78) | 69.32 (2.63) | 0.78 (0.03) | 58.43 (1.76) |
| CI | 0.10 to 0.69 | −4.82 to −3.75 | 21.40 to 24.48 | 64.10 to 74.53 | 0.73 to 0.83 | 54.94 to 61.93 | |
| DD | M (SE) | 1.11 (0.21) | −3.98 (0.39) | 23.18 (1.04) | 67.42 (3.50) | 0.86 (0.03) | 60.10 (2.42) |
| CI | 0.69 to 1.52 | −4.74 to −3.12 | 21.11 to 25.25 | 60.48 to 74.36 | 0.79 to 0.92 | 55.29 to 64.91 | |
| LD | M (SE) | 0.77 (0.27) | −4.08 (0.49) | 22.37 (1.40) | 61.10 (4.27) | 0.86 (0.04) | 54.76 (3.15) |
| CI | 0.23 to 1.31 | −5.06 to −2.15 | 19.59 to 25.15 | 51.78 to 70.42 | 0.77 to 0.94 | 48.50 to 61.01 | |
| 12 months post-recruitment / 12 months post-transplant | |||||||
| WL | M (SE) | 0.39 (0.14) | −4.45 (0.27) | 18.95 (0.99) | 61.89 (2.39) | 0.69 (0.03) | 59.11 (1.45) |
| CI | 0.11 to 0.68 | −4.99 to −3.91 | 16.99 to 20.92 | 57.16 to 66.63 | 0.63 to 0.75 | 56.24 to 61.99 | |
| DD | M (SE) | 1.30 (0.20) | −2.92 (0.39) | 24.45 (1.33) | 77.19 (3.18) | 0.85 (0.04) | 66.07 (1.99) |
| CI | 0.90 to 1.69 | −3.68 to −2.15 | 21.81 to 27.09 | 70.88 to 83.49 | 0.76 to 0.93 | 62.12 to 70.03 | |
| LD | M (SE) | 1.77 (0.26) | −2.41 (0.49) | 27.30 (1.79) | 83.90 (4.27) | 0.93 (0.05) | 74.07 (2.59) |
| CI | 1.25 to 2.28 | −3.39 to –1.43 | 23.74 to 30.84 | 75.43 to 92.37 | 0.82 to 1.03 | 68.93 to 79.21 | |
| F | 5.91 | 12.08 | 14.43 | 20.63 | 8.04 | 15.25 | |
| df | 103 | 102 | 111 | 110 | 108 | 101 | |
| P value | 0.004 | <0.001 | <0.001 | <0.001 | 0.001 | <0.001 | |
| Partial η2 | 0.10 | 0.19 | 0.21 | 0.27 | 0.13 | 0.23 | |
DD, those recruited as wait-list patients, but who subsequently had a deceased-donor transplant; EQ-VAS, EuroQoL Visual Analogue Scale; LD, those recruited as wait-list patients, but who subsequently had a living-donor transplant; M, mean; QoL, quality of life; RTSQs, Renal Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire status version; WL, those who remained on the waiting list from recruitment to 12m post-recruitment.
Figure 2Interaction graphs showing differences in outcomes at recruitment and at 1 year post-transplant/post-recruitment in those who remained on the WL for a kidney transplant (n=98), or those who were recruited as patients on the WL and subsequently received a DD kidney transplant (n=41), or a LD kidney transplant (n=26). Adjusted scores shown, controlling for age, previous RRT, previous experience of a transplant, education, car ownership and history of mental health problems.*p<0.05 WL vs DD, ***p<0.001 WL vs LD/DD. DD, deceased donor; LD, living donor; m, month; RRT, renal-replacement therapy; VAS, Visual Analogue Scale; WL, wait-list group.
Figure 3Bar graph showing differences in satisfaction with current renal treatment compared with previous renal treatment at 1 year post-transplant/post-recruitment in those who remained on the waiting list for a kidney transplant, or those who received a DD or LD kidney transplant after recruitment. Adjusted scores shown, controlling for age, previous RRT, previous experience of a transplant, education, car ownership, history of mental health problems and RTSQs scores at recruitment. DD, deceased donor; LD, living donor; m, month; RRT, renal-replacement therapy; RTSQs, Renal Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire status version.
Summary of qualitative themes with illustrative quotations
| Theme | Illustrative quotations |
| Positive impact of transplantation | Physical changes: |
| Uh, I feel a hell of a lot better. I was terribly, terribly ill, and I even look like me now. I didn’t look like me for quite a long time. I had yellow eyes and grey skin. There’s no doubt at all that it’s made a massive positive difference. | |
| My energy levels are amazing… my mates and that, they just couldn’t believe it. They said ‘god you look better than I do’. And I was full of life, I’m full of life. That’s the sort of euphoria that you need, that gradually, very gradually subsided to normality I suppose. But I was, I was almost hyper. I felt so good. | |
| Lifestyle: | |
| Everything’s gone right back to normal now it’s fine… You go back to practically normal. | |
| I feel a bit normal again you know yeah | |
| I’m back to how I was some years back. | |
| It gives you more freedom to, to actually live the life that I wanted to live, before dialysis… me and my wife are planning our honeymoon because I missed that because I just hit dialysis after my wedding. So now… after all these years on dialysis, we can plan for the future. | |
| Being able to work is massive for me and I can now work full-time and not only work full-time but own my own home which I wasn’t able to do before. | |
| I can just get up and do things without worrying… It is so much better than what it was before. Before I thought I was going to die, now ok I know I’m going to die but maybe hopefully in the future. So, I don’t worry about the little things anymore. | |
| I mean I can drink as much as I like now. That before you could only drink like 1 L a day and that. | |
| I mean I’ve gone back; I have a normal diet now. | |
| Impact of expectations on ability to cope post-transplant | Physical changes: |
| I have to drink like a fish. So, I’m all bloated … all I’ve got to show for (the transplant) is a huge stomach, because obviously they fitted a kidney in and the bag in my bladder so I look like I’m pregnant all the time… I’m a bit of a recluse actually. I just stay in all the time or if I was going out I can’t, I can’t wear anything fitted anymore because I look pregnant. Just, it’s really, rubbish! Woman, | |
| I’ve lots of marks on my face (from a reaction to the medication) which isn’t the greatest thing for confidence in the world. | |
| I'm on steroids so I have put on a bit of weight. | |
| There’s a thing when you have a transplant that you tend to pile it on, pile the weight on quite badly. | |
| You have to take a lot of water … after your transplant. You’re supposed to take 2 L every day…I find I’m running to the toilet a lot. It breaks your sleep at night, you’re up maybe three times during the night and you’re waking up and you’ve not really properly slept. | |
| I hadn’t used my bladder for 7 years, and it was pretty darn painful (to use it again) and took a lot of running to the loo every 5 min. | |
| Then oh god I was weeing for Britain! You know, it was, that was something I found very hard to get used to because as you know your bladder would have shrunk to nothing … when I had the transplant, I had to drink 6 L. I found that quite hard. | |
| When you’re on dialysis you dream of being able to drink. Once you’re told you have to drink its actually really difficult…. It’s become normal not to drink anything and then all of a sudden, you’re told to drink at least 3 or 4 L of water or fluid a day. | |
| I’m still a little bit sort of behind where I would be but I’ve got like 30, I’ve got 35% function which is a little bit beyond where I need to be feeling properly sort of strong and active. But I’ve had a year of it being sort of, it’s never been really bad but I’ve had a year of it being not quite where it needs to be so I’m a lot more tired than I’d like to be. | |
| I’ve just not got the stamina I had before like you know. | |
| I know it’s taken me a whole year to really be as I was before and I still feel in some ways I’m not quite back to what I was before. | |
| My metabolism seems to have changed a great deal from the moment I had the transplant. | |
| I've always wanted to try out cabin crewing before but now I can't even think of doing it because of my health conditions cos I can deteriorate if I start to fly. I have to be very cautious about what I want, you know like what I choose now, just to have to be very careful basically, even holidays. It’s just very depressing. | |
| Feelings towards donor | Gratitude: |
| I’m so grateful for having it. | |
| I’m very lucky to get the chance, due to my donor like; you know to get a chance of living again, and being without dialysis. | |
| I mean I really, I’m incredibly, incredibly lucky I’ve got this person who I don’t know, somewhere in the world, somewhere in the UK, I don’t know where, to thank for this change of my, total change of my life. | |
| Worry: | |
| Psychologically I would rather have had a dead donor. For the simple reason that you know, it’s difficult to deal with taking a part of your daughter’s body out which she may need in later years. She was 27 at the time. So… it was very difficult, very difficult. | |
| She’s an only child and she has two children of her own and (it’s) such a sacrifice and if anything had gone wrong or even now if anything happens to her and her other kidney, … I worry about her. | |
| You worry about the future you know. My (donor) she’s very young, she’s all of her life and that you know. |
DD, deceased donor; LD, living donor; HD, haemodialysis; PD, peritoneal dialysis; APD, automated peritoneal dialysis.