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U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services
Advisory Committee on Organ Transplantation
Summary Recommendations to the Secretary
Recommendation
1:
That the following ethical principles and informed consent
standards be implemented for all living donors.
The person
who gives consent to becoming a live organ donor must be:
- competent
(possessing decision making capacity)
- willing
to donate
- free
from coercion
- medically
and psychosocially suitable
- fully
informed of the risks and benefits as a donor and
- fully
informed of the risks, benefits, and alternative treatment
available to the recipient.
Recommendation
2: That each institution that performs living donor
transplantation provide an independent donor advocate to ensure
that the informed consent standards and ethical principles
described above are applied to the practice of all live organ
donor transplantation.
Recommendation
3: That a database of health outcomes for all live
donors be established and funded through and under the auspices
of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Recommendation
4: That serious consideration be given to the establishment
of a separate resource center for living donors and their
families.
Recommendation
5: That the present preference in OPTN allocation
policy — given to prior living organ donors who subsequently
need a kidney — be extended so that any living organ
donor would be given preference as a candidate for any organ
transplant, should one become needed.
Recommendation
6: That the requirements for HLA typing of liver
transplant recipients and/or living liver donors should be
deleted.
Recommendation
7: That a process be established that would verify
the qualifications of a center to perform living donor liver
or lung transplantation.
Recommendation
8: That specific methods be employed to increase
the education and awareness of patients at dialysis centers
as to transplant options available to them.
Recommendation
9: That research be conducted into the causes of
existing disparities in organ transplant rates and outcomes,
with the goal of eliminating those disparities.
Recommendation
10: That legislative strategies be adopted that will
encourage medical examiners and coroners not to withhold life-saving
organs and tissues from qualified organ procurement organizations.
Recommendation
11: That the secretary of HHS, in concert with the
Secretary of Education, should recommend to states that organ
and tissue donation be included in core curriculum standards
for public education as well as in the curricula of professional
schools, including schools of education, schools of medicine,
schools of nursing, schools of law, schools of public health,
schools of social work, and pharmacy schools.
Recommendation
12: That in order to ensure best practices, organ
procurement organizations and the OPTN be encouraged to develop,
evaluate, and support the implementation of improved management
protocols of potential donors.
Recommendation
13: That in order to ensure best practices at hospitals
and organ procurement organizations, the following measure
should be added to the CMS conditions of participation: each
hospital with more than 100 beds should identify an advocate
for organ and tissue donation from within the hospital clinical
staff.
Recommendation
14: That in order to ensure best practices at hospitals
and organ procurement organizations, the following measure
should be added to the CMS conditions of participation: Each
hospital should establish, in conjunction with its OPO, policies
and procedures to manage and maximize organ retrieval from
donors without a heartbeat.
Recommendation
15: That the following measure be added to the CMS
conditions of participation: Hospitals shall notify organ
procurement organizations prior to the withdrawal of life
support to a patient, so as to determine that patient's potential
for organ donation. If it is determined that the patient is
a potential donor, the OPO shall reimburse the hospital for
appropriate costs related to maintaining that patient as a
potential donor.
Recommendation
16: That the regulatory framework provided by CMS
for transplant center and Organ Procurement Organization certification
should be based on principles of continuous quality improvement.
Subsequent failure to meet performance standards established
under such principles should trigger quality improvement processes
under the supervision of HRSA.
Recommendation
17: That all hospitals, particularly those with more
than one hundred beds, be strongly encouraged by CMS and AHRQ
to implement policies such that the failure to identify a
potential organ donor and/or refer such a potential donor
to the organ procurement organization in a timely manner be
considered a serious medical error. Such events should be
investigated and reviewed by hospitals in a manner similar
to that for other major adverse healthcare events.
Recommendation
18: That the Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) strengthen its accreditation
provisions regarding organ donation, including consideration
of treating as a sentinel event the failure of hospitals to
identify a potential donor and/or refer a donor to the relevant
Organ Procurement Organization in a timely manner. Similar
review should be considered by the National Committee on Quality
Assurance (NCQA).
Recommendation
19: That the primary principle in organ donation
be honoring the donor's wishes and fulfilling the donor's
intent. This principle is known as donor designation.
Recommendation
20: That updated provisions of the Uniform Anatomical
Gift Act with respect to donor rights be fully implemented
in all states where the UAGA has been adopted, and that those
or substantially similar provisions be enacted in all other
states.
ACOT specifically
recommends that every OPO and hospital in a state that has
enacted the UAGA, as amended, should be educated in the implications
and enforcement of the UAGA. ACOT further recommends that
OPOs and hospitals in states that have not adopted the amendments
to the UAGA, or substantially similar provisions, should work
with their state legislatures to enact laws that enforce the
donor designation model.
ACOT recommends
that a comprehensive review and updating of the laws governing
anatomical gifts take place in each state and that all states
be encouraged to adopt laws intended to uphold the intent
of donors.
Recommendation
21: That HHS direct the OPTN and SRTR to rename and
broaden the scope of the present cadaver donor registration
form to meaningfully capture whether donor wishes are expressed
prior to the time of death, to determine whether donor wishes
are being honored, and, if not, to ascertain what conditions
prevented the fulfillment of the donor's wishes. Deceased
Donor: ACOT supports a change in the OPTN form, and in all
donation and transplantation nomenclature, from "cadaveric"
to "deceased donor."
Recommendation
22: That the use of split livers be encouraged as
a matter of national policy.
Recommendation
23: HHS should convene a consensus conference, involving
key members of the transplant community and insurance industry
representatives, with the goal of identifying a single reporting
mechanism for clinical outcomes data.
Recommendation
24: That HHS issue a request for proposals for research
to define and collect from OPOs and transplant centers those
donor and recipient factors in extra-renal organ transplantation
that would better explain relative risk of graft loss after
transplant.
Recommendation
25: That a minimum listing criterion, called the
MELD score critical level, should be established by the OPTN/UNOS
liver committee based on the MELD score that provides no significant
addition of life following transplantation relative to life
on the wait list. The MELD score critical level should be
reevaluated on a continuing basis, and changes made when appropriate.
Recommendation
26: That Section 105 of Senator Frist's bill (S.
573) be endorsed, so as to make clear that the term "valuable
consideration," in the National Organ Transplant Act
of 1984, does not include familial, emotional, psychological,
or physical benefit to an organ donor or recipient.
Recommendation
27: That HHS support legislation providing for elimination
of the current three-year time limit on Medicare coverage
for immunosuppressive drugs for the ESRD population.
Recommendation
28: That HHS support legislation providing for elimination
of the current requirement that recipients must have been
Medicare eligible when they underwent organ transplantation,
in a Medicare approved facility, to later receive the immunosuppressive
drug benefit when they become Medicare eligible through age
or disability.
Recommendation
29: HHS should fund necessary research initiatives,
and convene a national consensus conference, updating the
criteria involved in end of life issues related to the determination
of death in the context of organ donation and transplantation.
The three specific areas for review would be brain death,
cardiac death, and imminent death.
Recommendation
30: HHS should review the results of the research
conducted and national consensus conference convened in response
to Recommendation 29 and seek to resolve the many reimbursement
issues related to the determination of death in the context
of organ donation and transplantation. These deal with determination
of brain death, cardiac death, and imminent death, particularly
with regard to ECD organs. CMS and other appropriate HHS agencies
should also review their procedures with regard to living
donors to ensure that living donors are fully reimbursed,
and further that living donors are not disadvantaged with
respect to their other insurance needs.
Recommendation
31: The OPTN should continue its efforts at developing
a national standardized transplant quality of life (QOL) tool
that could be made available to all transplant centers for
assessing transplant end points in addition to mortality.
In this context, transplant centers should be encouraged to
establish and implement back to work programs for transplant
recipients and living organ donors because of their proven
ability in improving post-transplant quality of life, and
the OPTN should consider including such programs in their
criteria for transplant centers.
Recommendation
32: HHS should fund or conduct a review of all underlying
issues related to recipient selection criteria.
Recommendation
33: So as to identify more kidneys, and more appropriate
kidneys, that can be used for transplantation, HHS should
fund a clinical multi-center trial to determine whether, and
under what circumstances, pre-transplant kidney biopsies are
a predictor of post-transplant kidney function.
Recommendation
34: HHS should review and report on factors affecting
multicultural donation, and present data on transplantation
by race, ethnicity, sex, and region.
Recommendation
35: HHS should conduct an evaluation of materials
presently used by various centers and organizations across
the nation to educate potential transplant recipients; the
purpose of this review would be to develop improved patient
information and education as part of the informed consent
process. HHS should also ensure that appropriate hospital
personnel undergo annual training in the organ donation process;
such training would include OPO reporting requirements.
Recommendation 36: The Advisory Committee
on Organ Transplantation (ACOT) recommends that the Secretary
of Health and Human Services (HHS) seek authority to identify
and exclude certain practices from the definition of "valuable
consideration" in section 301(a) of the National Organ
Transplant Act, as amended.
Recommendation 37: The ACOT recommends that
the Secretary of HHS encourage States to undertake demonstration
projects to test the feasibility of adopting a model of presumed
consent to organ donation.
Recommendation 38: The ACOT recommends that
the Secretary of HHS continue to incorporate the constructs
and concepts of Burden of Disease (BOD) into ongoing analytical
efforts. These constructs must include both patient and objective
standpoints.
Recommendation 39: The ACOT recommends that
the Secretary of HHS encourage the OPTN to evaluate allocation
policies to expand the utilization of hearts.
Recommendation 40: The ACOT recommends that
the Secretary of HHS authorize HHS oversight for whole-body
donation.
Recommendation 41: The ACOT recommends that
the Secretary of HHS direct the OPTN to develop allocation
policy pertaining to nondirected, living-donor organs.
Recommendation 42: ACOT recommends to the
Secretary that the OPTN be asked to expeditiously consider
all issues associated with the development of a registry for
matching living donors and recipients, paying particular attention
to informed consent and the monitoring of long-term outcomes
of the donors.
Recommendation 43: The Advisory Committee
on Organ Transplantation (ACOT) recommends to the Secretary
that the Medicare program allow donation after cardiac death
direct organ acquisition expenses be reimbursable to the organ
procurement organization under the Federal program.
Recommendation 44: ACOT recommends to the
Secretary that he promote collaboration between the transplant
community and the insurance industry to adopt standards of
coverage for living organ donors specifically relating to
future adverse events (e.g., hernia repair, biliary tract
reconstruction) resulting from the donation.
Recommendation 45: ACOT recommends to the
Secretary that he take action intended to provide Medicare
eligibility for any living donor who loses insurability as
a result of disability on the basis of previous organ donation.
Recommendation 46: The ACOT recommends to
the Secretary that he direct the OPTN to develop and distribute
within the transplant community, particularly to transplant
programs and OPOs, a set of practice guidelines to be followed
with respect to public solicitation of organ donors. The objective
of these guidelines is to maintain the effectiveness and fairness
of the existing organ allocation system and to protect the
safety of the living donor.
Recommendation 47: ACOT recommends that
the Secretary facilitate cooperation with international organizations
and/or foreign governments to identify and address risks of
exploitation to, and risks to the health of, unrelated living
donors to United States recipients.
Recommendation 48: ACOT recommends that
the Secretary facilitate cooperation with international organizations
and/or foreign governments to identify and address risks of
exploitation to, and risks to the health of, unrelated living
donors to United States recipients.
Recommendation 49: ACOT recommends that
the Secretary take actions to ensure that data on the general
health status of living donors are collected on a nationwide
basis by a centralized entity. The ACOT recommends that such
data be collected, at a minimum, on an annual basis for a
period of 10 years post-donation. The ACOT further recommends
that the transplant program that performed a donor’s transplant
be principally responsible for the data submissions or ensure
that another institution providing ongoing medical care to,
or follow up on, the donor collect and submit such data.
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