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Psychiatric Recommendations for Patients Pursing Kidney Transplantation

M. Jesse, A. Eshelman, T. Rosetti, M. Abouljoud, J. Denny, A. Patel, D. Kim.

Transplant Institute, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI.

Meeting: 2015 American Transplant Congress

Abstract number: 499

Keywords: Kidney transplantation, Psychiatric comorbidity, Psychosocial

Session Information

Session Name: Concurrent Session: Psychosocial and Treatment Adherence

Session Type: Concurrent Session

Date: Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Session Time: 4:00pm-5:30pm

 Presentation Time: 4:36pm-4:48pm

Location: Room 121-C

Introduction: End-stage renal disease patients have high rates of psychiatric and cognitive pathologies. Despite this, renal transplant candidates do not routinely undergo comprehensive psychiatric evaluation. Purpose: To report on psychiatric and cognitive factors and recommendations pre-kidney transplant across three patient groups: referred pre-listing for an identified psychiatric/psychosocial concern (Group 1), listed candidates as part of routine yearly re-evaluation (Group 2), and routine pre-listing for patients 70+yrs old (Group 3). Methods: 369 patients (Group 1, 193 pre-listing referral; Group 2, 99; and Group 3, 77) underwent semi-structured psychiatric evaluation by doctoral level health psychologists specialized in organ transplant, including cognitive screening. Results: Consistent with prior research, a significant proportion of patients (72.6%) displayed some level of cognitive impairment. There were multiple significant differences between groups on recommendations.

Table 1. n(%)
  Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 p
Displays adequate understanding of transplant process 161(83.4) 92(92.9) 68(88.3) .04
Recommended further education or resources 32(16.6) 7(7.1%) 7(9.1)  
         
No psychotherapeutic/psychiatric medication recommendations 114(59.1) 81(81.8) 70(90.9) .001
Psychotherapeutic/psychiatric medication evaluation 77(39.9) 18(18.2) 5(6.5)  
         
No cognitive recommendations 77(39.9) 42(42.4) 18(23.4) .02
Recommendation of accommodation or further cognitive testing 112(58.0) 57(57.6) 57(74.0)  
         
No current substance use 133(68.9) 81(81.8) 66(85.7) .001
Recommend cessation of tobacco, alcohol, marijuana and/or illicit substances 60(31.1) 18(18.2) 8(10.4)  
         
No substance use treatment recommendations 152(78.8) 91(91.9) 72(93.5) .001
Recommendations for or verification of substance use treatment 40(20.7) 8(8.1) 2(2.6)  
         
Adequate support for transplant 122(63.2) 78(78.8) 60(77.9) .003
Support requires further mobilization 71(36.8) 21(21.2) 15(19.5)  
However, all three groups displayed additional recommendations. The majority of patients (221, 59.9%) had 2 to 3 recommendations. This number did not change when excluding recommendations for additional education for understanding of the transplant process. Only 9 patients (2.4%) had no additional recommendations. Conclusion: The findings provide support for more in-depth psychosocial assessments as standard clinical protocol as a number of concerning psychiatric and psychosocial factors were identified.

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To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Jesse M, Eshelman A, Rosetti T, Abouljoud M, Denny J, Patel A, Kim D. Psychiatric Recommendations for Patients Pursing Kidney Transplantation [abstract]. Am J Transplant. 2015; 15 (suppl 3). https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/psychiatric-recommendations-for-patients-pursing-kidney-transplantation/. Accessed May 9, 2025.

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