U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services
Advisory Committee on Organ Transplantation
Recommendations 36–41
The Committee
(ACOT) met on November 4-5, 2004, in Rockville, MD, and unanimously
agreed on the following 6 recommendations:
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.
The Secretary's
authority should be limited to legitimate and beneficial practices
that are intended to increase the supply of human organs, without
creating a commercial market for the purchase or sale of human organs
or posing a risk of coercion of a potential donor or donor family.
In addition, the Secretary should be required to obtain an appropriate
independent ethical evaluation before excluding any practice from
the prohibition on valuable consideration.
ACOT has concluded
that a process to limit the scope of "valuable consideration"
would encourage the development of ethical practices to increase
the supply of human organs and provide certainty to the transplant
community about the scope of permissible activities. Regulatory
authority is both more flexible and more responsive to innovation
than an expanded statutory list of practices that are not included
in the term "valuable consideration." The notice and comment
period will provide an opportunity for public and professional input
into any proposed regulation.
ACOT, therefore,
recommends that Section 301 of the National Organ Transplant Act
be amended in its entirety to read as follows:
-
(a) Prohibition
It shall be unlawful for any person to knowingly acquire, receive,
or otherwise transfer any human organ for valuable consideration
for use in human transplantation if the transfer affects interstate
commerce.
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(b) Penalties
Any person who violates subsection (a) of this section shall
be fined not more than $50,000 or imprisoned not more than five
years, or both.
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(c) Definitions
For purposes of subsection (a) of this section:
The term "human organ" means the human (including
fetal) kidney, liver, heart, lung, pancreas, bone marrow, cornea,
eye, bone, and skin or any subpart thereof and any other human
organ (or any subpart thereof, including that derived from a
fetus) specified by the Secretary of Health and Human Services
by regulation.
The term "valuable consideration" does not include
the reasonable payments associated with the removal, transportation,
implantation, processing, preservation, quality control, and
storage of a human organ, the expenses of travel, housing, and
lost wages incurred by the donor of a human organ in connection
with the donation of the organ, or such other practices
that the Secretary of Health and Human Services shall designate
by regulation pursuant to subsection (d) of this section.
The term "interstate commerce" has the meaning prescribed
for it by section 321(b) of Title 21.
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(d)
The Secretary of Health and Human Services shall propose and
promulgate regulations to ensure that interpretations of subsection
(c)(2) do not impede legitimate and beneficial practices that
are intended to increase the supply of human organs available
for transplantation, provided, however, that any practice that
poses a risk of coercion in connection with the donation of
a human organ or of the creation of a commercial market for
the purchase or sale of human organs is not a legitimate or
beneficial practice within the meaning of this subsection (d).
In considering legitimate and beneficial practices that will
be excluded from the prohibition on valuable consideration set
forth in subsection (c)(2), the Secretary shall seek an ethical
evaluation from an appropriate entity, including without limitation
the Institute of Medicine and the President's Council on Bioethics,
or such similar or successor entity."
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.
The current
system for the donation of human organs from deceased donors is
based on a default assumption that individuals prefer not to donate
their organs after their death. A policy of presumed consent would
include as a default assumption that individuals do prefer to donate
their organs for transplantation at death. Because of the life-saving
potential of transplantation, a presumed consent model would be
a moral improvement over the current system, provided individual
autonomy is appropriately protected through a system of declining
to donate.
The ACOT, therefore,
recommends that the Secretary authorize, encourage, and support
State demonstration projects to design and implement "presumed
consent" models for making anatomical gifts. The precise design
of such models should be left to the states, provided that any State
demonstration project authorized by the Secretary shall include
provisions to ensure adequate notification and education of the
citizens of the State and a method designed to permit any person
not wishing to authorize an anatomical gift at death to register
a decision to refuse to authorize an anatomical gift.
ACOT believes
that until presumed consent models are tested, HHS cannot make an
informed decision on whether presumed consent is a viable alternative
for increasing donation rates. Such project(s) will be reviewed
by HHS to determine if these program(s) increase the supply of organs
as a result of presumed consent.
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.
ACOT Recommendation
31 urged the OPTN to 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.
The Data Working
Group (DWG) was created to coordinate between the Scientific Registry
of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) and the OPTN to make sure that the
right data are collected in appropriate and efficient ways. The
DWG is advisory to OPTN and the scientific committee of SRTR.
Analysis of
transplant outcomes has so far focused on time to death and time
to graft loss. Although these are clearly important outcomes, with
improving patient and graft survival they are no longer the only
relevant outcomes to consider. Because it is not sufficient to consider
only graft and overall survival, ACOT charged the DWG with looking
into quality of life issues.
ACOT anticipates
continuing its involvement with QOL issues for transplant recipients
and to capture the importance of burden of disease. ACOT recommends
that direction be given to the entities pursuing burden of disease
in a QOL model, including QOL endpoints plus other elements (e.g.,
hospitalizations, mortality, patient standpoints).
Recommendation
39: The ACOT recommends that the Secretary of HHS encourage the
OPTN to evaluate allocation policies to expand the utilization of
hearts.
Heart utilization
rates vary from transplant center to transplant center and from
Designated Service Area (DSA) to DSA. It is not known why this occurs.
Utilization rates vary according to OPO performance, surgeon preferences,
etc., and it is a complex issue.
The OPTN Thoracic
Committee published a proposed policy for comment to widen the sharing
area for Status 1 patients. The intent is to increase utilization.
Presently, 100 or more hearts per year are going unused. By widening
the sharing area, immediate utilization by Status 1 patients would
be increased. Twenty-two percent of DSAs do not do match runs for
placing hearts. It is possible that some diagnostic tests performed
on the potential donor may have shown that the heart is compromised
in some way. Changing the allocation strategy as modeled by SRTR
would allow 112 more transplants per year and 20 more deaths. There
is a net benefit.
ACOT views this
change in the sharing area as a positive step in utilizing more
donors. However, the proposed policy has not been seen by some in
a positive light. The challenge for OPTN will be to look at this
proposed change and decide whether to implement the policy. Following
public comment and reconsideration by the Thoracic Committee the
proposal will be offered for consideration to the OPTN/UNOS Board
of Directors.
Recommendation
40: The ACOT recommends that the Secretary of HHS authorize HHS
oversight for whole-body donation.
The issue of
whole-body donation was brought to ACOT's attention through media
reports of events involving desecration—denigrating human
bodies to the level of commodities. ACOT's concern is that when
an untoward event is covered by the media, it casts a shadow on
what we do in transplantation. There is a public safety issue, as
well. The fact is that there are many more tissue donors than organ
donors every year. Tens of thousands of lives are benefited by tissue
donation. Whole body donation is also significant. Any single event
in any of these arenas affects the others. The public does not distinguish
among these different areas.
Currently, no
single regulatory body has oversight over this area. FDA does not
have control over human tissue for study. The FDA becomes involved
only if there was crossover and some tissue for study was transplanted
or used for treatment. Although some states have laws about transporting
bodies over state lines, regulations governing disposition of bodies
vary among the states. ACOT's recommendation is for providing HHS
oversight and greater accountability.
Recommendation
41: The ACOT recommends that the Secretary of HHS direct the OPTN
to develop allocation policy pertaining to nondirected, living-donor
organs.
ACOT believes
that individuals offering nondirected, living organ donation should
not be subjected to any sort of coercion. Payment for organ donation
is illegal in the United States. However, reimbursement for medical
and related expenses, including housing, travel, and lost wages
is acceptable and encouraged. In fact, Congress recently passed
legislation that provides the authority for HHS to award a grant
for supporting reimbursement of travel and expenses toward living
organ donation.
ACOT recommendation
is to have the allocation of the nondirected, living donor organ
under the stewardship of the transplant community in the same manner
as deceased donor organs. The appropriate allocation unit for a
nondirected, living donor organ should be a small geographic unit,
so as to minimize cold ischemia time and maximize the benefit of
using a living donor. The unit might legitimately be the transplant
center or the city in which the transplant center is located. The
unit of allocation should be determined prospectively by the OPTN.
Go to: Consensus
Recommendations 1-18 (November 2002)
Go to: Consensus
Recommendations 19-28 (May 2003)
Go to: Consensus
Recommendations 29-35 (November 2003)
Go to: Consensus
Recommendation 42 (May 2005)
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