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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Pilot transplant project aims to spur kidney swaps
If the long-awaited pilot project by the United Network for Organ Sharing pans out, specialists predict it eventually could result in an extra 2,000 to 3,000 transplants a year through "kidney paired donation," where someone donates a kidney on a patient's behalf so they can receive a compatible organ from someone else in return.
"The more people involved, the more people match," explains Dr. Dorry Segev at Johns Hopkins University Hospital, which pioneered kidney swaps and is one of four transplant coordinating centers helping to run the UNOS project.
Kidney paired donation is increasing but still rare — with more than 760 performed in the last three years — and patients today often must track down participating centers on their own and travel hundreds of miles for surgery.
"I do have friends that are on dialysis that can't afford to come this far to receive a transplant," says Heather Hall, 31, of Denham Springs, La., who was one of 16 patients to receive a new kidney during an unusually large exchange last week at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington.
Born with bad kidneys and needing her third transplant, she read about Georgetown's program after doctors in Louisiana said she'd become too hard to match. Her aunt donated on her behalf.
The UNOS project, which began last month, is part of a broader effort to increase kidney paired donation, considered one of the best bets at boosting live-donor transplants — the optimal kind. Some transplant centers already have formed regional alliances to mix and match larger numbers of patients and their would-be donors. Even some small hospitals are making a name for themselves by amassing lists of potential swappers.
"We're trying to tell folks, 'Don't take no for an answer,'" says transplant surgeon Dr. Adam Bingaman of San Antonio's Methodist Specialty and Transplant Hospital, who led another 16-way kidney exchange this month.
Of the more than 87,000 people on the yearslong national waiting list for a kidney, at least 6,000 instead could qualify for a kidney swap if only they knew about that option, Bingaman recently wrote in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Fewer than 17,000 kidney transplants are performed in the U.S. each year, and just over a third are from living donors, relatives or friends who happen to be biologically compatible.
Without their own donor, patients await a cadaver kidney — and nearly one in three patients may never get one because their immune system has become abnormally primed to attack a new organ, says Georgetown kidney transplant director Dr. Keith Melancon. Black patients are most at risk, but anyone can become "sensitized" from pregnancy, blood transfusions, dialysis or, like Louisiana's Hall, a previous transplant.
Kidney paired donation evolved as an alternative for people with incompatible donors, especially those super hard-to-match.
The UNOS project aims to spur more of them. Any of the 77 transplant centers participating so far merely submits key matching information about a patient and his or her would-be donor to UNOS' database, which periodically alerts centers to potential matches with people from other parts of the country.
The first attempt late last month — when the database contained just 43 kidney patients and 45 donors — turned up seven potentially matching pairs, says Dr. Kenneth Andreoni of Ohio State University, UNOS' kidney committee chairman. The rest is up to the home hospitals of the patients and donors, who ship each other blood samples necessary for final compatibility testing and then set up the operations.
Transplant specialists are divided on whether the UNOS approach will prove best, or whether regional alliances or developing "centers of excellence" for kidney swaps might be more effective. In San Antonio, Bingaman notes that a third of his hospital's 180 live-donor kidney transplants this year were part of exchanges. That's a big increase from 71 live-donor transplants in 2007, before he began swaps.
That debate aside, people can stay on their home hospital's transplant list and be part of the pilot national database, potentially increasing their chances of finding of a match, says Hopkins' Segev.
And regardless of how it's done, increasing kidney swaps potentially helps everyone — by removing people from the national waiting list.
"You added new kidneys to the system," says Georgetown's Melancon, whose hospital is transplanting about 30 percent of the people on its waiting list, nearly double the rate before he began exchanges. He's now starting to comb old records to find patients whose incompatible donors were turned away years ago, to see if their donor's willing to give it another try.

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