Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Organ transplant system in U.S. faces an overhaul

- By Sheryl Gay Stolberg

The Biden administra­tion announced Wednesday that it would seek to break up the network that has long run the nation’s organ transplant system as part of a broader modernizat­ion effort intended to shorten wait times, address racial inequities and reduce the number of patients who die while waiting.

More than 100,000 people in the United States are awaiting organ transplant­s in a system that has long been defined by an imbalance between supply and demand. Patients sometimes wait years for donated organs, and about 6,000 Americans a year — 17 each day, according to the federal government — die while waiting.

For nearly four decades, the organ donation system has been run by the United Network for Organ Sharing, a national nonprofit known as UNOS that, under contract with the federal government, coordinate­s the work of transplant hospitals and organ procuremen­t organizati­ons to match transplant candidates with donated organs.

The Biden administra­tion is now putting the network out to bid, hoping to foster competitio­n in a system that has effectivel­y operated as a monopoly. Officials say their first task is to upgrade the outdated computer system that matches organs to patients; they are now seeking bidders to do that work.

A report last year by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine found that the organ transplant system was “demonstrab­ly inequitabl­e” and suffered from “significan­t nonuse of donated organs,” the academies said

WASHINGTON >> in announcing the study. Roughly 1 in 5 kidneys from deceased donors is not used, the study said.

Critics have long argued the system is inefficien­t and discrimina­tes against people of color, calling for a broad overhaul. This is not the first reform effort; 25 years ago, the Clinton administra­tion tried its own modernizat­ion initiative.

“Every day, patients and families across the United States rely on the Organ Procuremen­t and Transplant­ation Network to save the lives of their loved ones who experience organ failure,” Carole Johnson, the administra­tor of the Health Resources and Services Administra­tion, or HRSA, the branch of the Department of Health and Human Services that oversees the transplant system, said in a statement.

She said the overhaul was intended to “bring greater transparen­cy to the system and to reform and modernize” the network.

In 2021, while seeking public comment on ways to address racial inequities in the system, the Health and Human Services Department said that Black people were four times more likely, and Latinos 1.3 times more likely, than White people to have kidney failure. But Black people and Latinos who are on dialysis are less likely to be put on transplant lists and less likely to have transplant­s.

The UNOS system relies on 56 local organ procuremen­t organizati­ons — independen­t groups that persuade families to donate their loved ones’ organs, and arrange for the organs to be removed and delivered to transplant centers. But some of the procuremen­t organizati­ons operate far more effectivel­y than others, leading to vast regional inequities.

Critics say UNOS is insular and lacks transparen­cy. Johnson, the HRSA administra­tor, said officials want to end a current practice in which members of the UNOS board sit on the Organ Procuremen­t and Transplant­ation Network’s board, a panel of industry experts establishe­d by Congress to determine policies regarding organ transplant­ation — the same policies UNOS carries out.

“The referees and the players ought to be two different entities,” Johnson said in an interview.

In a statement, UNOS said it welcomed “a competitiv­e and open bidding process” to “advance our efforts to save as many lives as possible, as equitably as possible.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Surgical instrument­s lay on a table during a kidney transplant at Medstar Georgetown University.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Surgical instrument­s lay on a table during a kidney transplant at Medstar Georgetown University.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States