Organ donation and utilization in the United States, 2004 |
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Authors: | Francis L. Delmonico Ellen Sheehy William H. Marks Prabhakar Baliga Joshua J. McGowan John C. Magee |
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Affiliation: | Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA;Association of Organ Procurement Organizations, Newton, MA;Swedish Medical Center, Seattle, WA;Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) Medical Center, Charleston, SC;Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients, University Renal Research and Education Association, Ann Arbor, MI;Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI |
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Abstract: | This article discusses issues directly related to the organ donation process, including donor consent, donor medical suitability, non-recovery of organs, organs recovered but not transplanted, expanded criteria donors (ECD), and donation after cardiac death (DCD). The findings and topics covered have important implications for how to evaluate and share best practices of organ donation as implemented by organ procurement organizations (OPOs) and major donor hospitals in the same donation service areas (DSAs). In 2002 and 2003, US hospitals referred more than one million deaths or imminent deaths to the OPOs of their DSA. Referrals increased by nearly 10% from 2002 to 2003 (1,022,280 to 1,121,392). Donor consents have increased by about 5% and the number of total deceased donors has risen from 6,187 to 6,455. Since multiple organs are recovered from most donors, this increase allowed more than 500 additional wait-listed candidates to receive an organ transplant than in the prior year. Non-traditional donor sources have experienced a large rate of increase; in 2003 the number of ECD kidney donors increased by 8% and the number of DCD donors increased by 43% , from 189 donors in year 2002 to 271 donors in 2003. |
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Keywords: | Deceased donors donation rates living donors OPOs organ donation organ procurement SRTR |
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