1. Impact of US Public Health Service increased risk deceased donor designation on organ utilization
- Author
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Sapiano, Mathew R. P., Jones, Jefferson M., Bowman, James, Levi, Marilyn E., and Basavaraju, Sridhar V.
- Abstract
Under US Public Health Service guidelines, organ donors with risk factors for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), or hepatitis C virus (HCV) are categorized as increased risk donors (IRD). Previous studies have suggested that IRDorgans are utilized at lower rates than organs from standard risk donors (SRD), but these studies were conducted prior to universal donor nucleic acid test screening. We conducted risk‐adjusted analyses to determine the effect of IRDdesignation on organ utilization using 2010‐2017 data (21 626 heart, 101 160 kidney, 52 714 liver, and 16 219 lung recipients in the United States) from the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network. There was no significant difference (P< .05) between risk‐adjusted utilization rates for IRDvs SRDorgans for adult hearts and livers and pediatric kidneys, livers, and lungs. Significantly lower utilization was found among IRDadult kidneys, lungs, and pediatric hearts. Analysis of the proportion of transplanted organs recovered from IRDby facility suggests that a subset of facilities contribute to the underutilization of adult IRDkidneys. Along with revised criteria and nomenclature to identify donors with HIV,HBV, or HCVrisk factors, educational efforts to standardize informed consent discussions might improve organ utilization. Using data from 2010–2017 and comprehensive risk adjustment models, excluding donors with positive hepatitis B or C screening test results, increased risk donor designation was observed to have minimal impact on organ utilization. See the companion articles by Bixler et al (page 2570) and Jones et al (page 2583).
- Published
- 2019
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