Living Kidney Donor Transplantation

Right now, more than 120,000 people are on the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) waitlist for an organ match to receive a transplant. Even if someone currently is on the waitlist, they aren't guaranteed to receive the organ. If a patient has to wait too long, their health could start to decline and become worse. However, living donors have the opportunity to help a person in need of an organ transplant immediately.

What’s a Living Donor Transplantation?

A living donor transplant is an option where instead of waiting for a matching kidney from a deceased donor, they’ll receive one from a living donor. In this situation, a living donor should be an overall healthy person, both mentally and physically. In some cases living, donor transplants are the only hope for some patients to have a second chance at life. Living donors have a chance to save a life while they’re still living.

Interested in Learning More About Kidney Donation

Who is a Living Donor?

A living donor refers to a healthy person who can be blood relative to the recipient is in need of a liver transplant. A living donor also can be a close, non-blood-related friend of relative that wishes to donate a portion of their liver. The living donor could be:

  • Family members (parents, siblings, aunts/uncles, cousins, uncles)
  • In-laws
  • Religious group members
  • Family friends
  • Anonymous donors

Benefits of a living donor transplant:

Shorter Wait Time

Shorter Wait Time

Living donor transplants can take place much sooner and can be scheduled when it is convenient for you and your donor.



Visiting a Patient

Quicker Recover Time 

Generally, living donor recipients recover faster than those with deceased donors.

Functions better and longer

The Kidney Functions Better and Longer

An organ from a living donor functions better and longer because the kidney immediately comes from a live host.

More Time With Family

More Time with Family 

It’s possible to have the transplant scheduled before dialysis is required. This means the recipient can have a better outcome and more time with their loved ones.

Lower Rejection Rate

Lower Rejection Rate

Living donor kidney transplants offer a lower rejection rate than one from a deceased donor.

Save Other Lives

Help Save More Lives

Living donor transplants allows recipients to be removed from the waitlist. This can help to possibly shorten the time for others still waiting on the waitlist and help increase the number of kidney transplants.


Living Donor Stories

A2 back-to-back, 4-way kidney swaps at UI Health

2 back-to-back, 4-way kidney swaps at UI Health

The four-way paired kidney exchanges were the first two ever performed at UI Health.

Kidney Transplant – That No Other Hospital Could Provide

Kidney Transplant – That No Other Hospital Could Provide

The kidney transplant that no other hospital could after being diagnosed with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS).

Two Families Pull Off Multiple-Donor Kidney Transplants

Transplant surgeons performed successful kidney transplants involving multiple donors and recipients from two families.