Objective: The purpose of this prospective study was to evaluate the clinical, laboratory, and donation-specific outcomes of living kidney donors 6 years after donation.
Methods: We included a total of 93 kidney donors and 54 age- and sex-matched individuals as control group through a type 2 cohort consecutive recruitment. We detected kidney function abnormalities and the presence of hypertension, diabetes, and cardiovascular events during the 6 years follow-up period.
Results: The mean serum creatinine levels were higher (p<0.001), and the estimated glomerular filtration rate levels were lower (p<0.001) in living kidney donors 6 years after donation when compared with controls. The protein/creatinine ratio of the study population was also higher (p=0.014). There was no difference in outcomes between the groups for end-stage kidney disease and cardiovascular mortality. A higher rate of new-onset hypertension (6.4 vs. 32.9%), diabetes mellitus (0.0 vs. 4.3%), chronic kidney disease (0.0 vs. 2.1%), and cardiovascular disease (0.0 vs. 2.1%) was demonstrated among donors 6 years after donation (p<0.001, respectively).
Conclusion: Our data have demonstrated that the reduction in Glomerular filtration rate induced by kidney donation might cause an increase in adverse renal and cardiovascular events.