A Survey Study of Liver Donors' Information Needs on Recipient Outcomes in High-Risk Donation Scenarios.
IntroductionLiving donor liver transplantation is expanding worldwide as a treatment for end-stage liver disease, especially in high-risk recipients.
APA
Chen A, Carroll A, et al. (2025). A Survey Study of Liver Donors' Information Needs on Recipient Outcomes in High-Risk Donation Scenarios.. Progress in transplantation (Aliso Viejo, Calif.), 35(4), 206-213. https://doi.org/10.1177/15269248251383952
MLA
Chen A, et al.. "A Survey Study of Liver Donors' Information Needs on Recipient Outcomes in High-Risk Donation Scenarios.." Progress in transplantation (Aliso Viejo, Calif.), vol. 35, no. 4, 2025, pp. 206-213.
PMID
41105121
Abstract
IntroductionLiving donor liver transplantation is expanding worldwide as a treatment for end-stage liver disease, especially in high-risk recipients. No standardized information is provided to donors during the informed consent process. Consequently, variable information may be provided to the donor about the recipient, which may undermine donor-informed consent.Research QuestionsIn high-risk donation scenarios, it is uncertain whether information disclosed about the recipient is sufficient for donor-informed decision-making. Would information about the recipient's potential adverse and beneficial short- and long-term outcomes help donors make a decision about donating?DesignAn online survey was conducted of previous living liver donors' likelihood of donating and information needs regarding their recipients in 3 hypothetical high-risk clinical scenarios: alcoholic liver disease (ALD) with high relapse risk, acute liver failure (ALF), and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with high recurrence risk.ResultsA total of 98 living liver donors participated in this study. Most living liver donors expressed willingness to donate to a patient in each scenario: ALD (51%), ALF (56%), and HCC (85%). Most living liver donors (56% to 93%) reported desiring information about the recipient's diagnosis, clinical condition, and projected outcomes in their donation decision-making process. Most living liver donors (82%) considered an acute consultation service to be useful in deciding whether to donate to a patient with ALF.ConclusionsThe findings suggested that transplant programs should incorporate recipient health information with recipient consent into the informed consent process and offer consultation services to support living liver donors' decision-making.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Liver Transplantation; Female; Male; Middle Aged; Adult; Informed Consent; Living Donors; Surveys and Questionnaires; Decision Making; Carcinoma, Hepatocellular; Liver Neoplasms; Aged; Tissue and Organ Procurement; Liver Diseases, Alcoholic
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