A new study by Faculty of Medicine researchers reveals a widening gap in kidney donation between women and men in the U.S. over the last decade.
The findings, which appear in an article in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN), suggest that strategies to remove financial barriers to living donation may be important to maintain living donation.
Receiving a kidney from a living donor is the preferred treatment for patients with kidney failure, but the number of living donor transplantations in the U.S. has been decreasing since 2005. To determine the factors underlying this decline, Jagbir Gill, an Associate Professor in the Division of Nephrology, and colleagues examined data from the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients and the U.S. Census.
Between 2005 and 2015, the unadjusted rate of living kidney donation was 30.1 and 19.3 per million population in women and men, respectively. After adjusting for differences in age, race, the incidence of kidney failure and geographic factors, the incidence of donation was 44 per cent higher in women. Over time, the incidence of donation was stable in women but declined in men, resulting in a widened gap in donation between women and men.
Living donation rates varied by income in both women and men, but the decline in living donation was most marked in men from lower income groups. Finally, the investigators found that living related donations declined in both women and men, in all income groups.
“We found that the biggest drop in donation has been in men, while women have continued to donate at similar rates,” Dr. Gill said. “We also found that the drop in donation was greatest in lower income populations suggesting that the financial costs of donation may be preventing more men from donating in the current economic climate, leaving more women to donate instead. This research strongly supports initiatives to reduce or reimburse all costs associated with donation so that people who come forward to donate don’t have to worry about incurring any out of pocket expenses.”
In an accompanying editorial, Arthur Matas, of the University of Minnesota, and Rebecca Hays, of the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, noted that many countries have enacted policies to ensure that donors are compensated for costs related to living donors and that their jobs are protected during recovery.
“Living donors are heroes; they undergo a major operation, with associated risks and of no medical benefit. Irrespective of donation rates, donors should not also have to pay donation-related costs,” they wrote. “The body of research from Gill and coauthors suggests that eliminating financial barriers may also decrease gender disparities in living kidney donation.”