Kidney transplant recipients reported higher health-related quality of life compared with their pre-transplantation status and patients receiving dialysis, but lower physical quality of life compared to the general population in the long term.
Systematic Review (n=6,929)
Does kidney transplantation improve health-related quality of life compared to pre-transplantation, dialysis, or other relevant populations?
Health-related quality of life improves significantly after kidney transplantation compared to dialysis or pre-transplantation, though physical HRQOL may remain lower than the general population in the long term.
BACKGROUND: Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) is becoming an increasingly important outcome in kidney transplantation (KT). To describe HRQOL in kidney transplant recipients (KTRs), this systematic review summarizes literature that compared HRQOL among KTRs and other relevant populations i.e. patients receiving dialysis, patients on the waiting list (WL) for KT, patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) not receiving renal replacement therapy (RRT), the general population (GP) and healthy controls (HCs) and themselves before KT. METHODS: The literature search was conducted in PubMed, Embase, Web of Science and the Cochrane Library. Eligible studies published between January 2000 and October 2020 were included. RESULTS: Forty-four studies comprising 6929 KTRs were included in this systematic review. Despite the study heterogeneity, KTRs reported a higher HRQOL after KT compared with pre-transplantation and compared with patients receiving dialysis with or without being on the WL, especially in disease-specific domains (i.e. burden and effects of kidney disease). Additionally, KTRs had similar to marginally higher HRQOL compared with patients with CKD Stages 3-5 not receiving RRT. When compared with HCs or the GP, KTRs reported similar HRQOL in the first 1 or 2 years after KT and lower physical HRQOL and lower to comparable mental HRQOL in studies with longer post-transplant time. CONCLUSIONS: The available evidence suggests that HRQOL improves after KT and can be restored to but not always maintained at pre-CKD HRQOL levels. Future studies investigating intervention targets to improve or maintain post-transplant HRQOL are needed.
Wang et al. (Fri,) conducted a systematic review in End-stage kidney disease (Kidney transplantation) (n=6,929). Kidney transplantation vs. Pre-transplantation, dialysis, waiting list, CKD, general population, healthy controls was evaluated on Health-related quality of life (HRQOL). Kidney transplant recipients reported higher health-related quality of life compared with their pre-transplantation status and patients receiving dialysis, but lower physical quality of life compared to the general population in the long term.
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