Toronto Star

Transplant programs review policy on vaccinatio­ns

Organizati­ons discuss mandatory COVID-19 inoculatio­n for recipients

- BRITTANY HOBSON

Transplant centres in Western Canada have stopped short of requiring organ recipients to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19, but they say conversati­ons about such a policy are ongoing.

Some centres in other parts of the country, including Ontario, are requiring proof of vaccinatio­n before a patient is approved for the life-saving surgery.

BC Transplant, located in Vancouver, said COVID-19 vaccinatio­n is not required to be eligible for a transplant, but programs in the province are actively reviewing it.

“The transplant programs are strongly encouragin­g all pretranspl­ant patients to be vaccinated against COVID-19, as they do with many other vaccine-preventabl­e infections,” the agency said in a statement.

Similarly, Alberta Health Services told The Canadian Press it has long been a requiremen­t that patients preparing for transplant have all vaccines to help maximize their chances of success post-transplant. It notes, however, it’s only a practice guideline at this point.

Saskatchew­an has also not made any changes.

“Saskatchew­an’s organ transplant teams are strongly supportive of all recipients and donors having COVID vaccinatio­ns, and the issue of requiring these vaccinatio­ns in recipients is actively being discussed,” Lisa Thomson, a spokespers­on for the Saskatchew­an Health Authority, said in a statement.

The Ajmera Transplant Centre at Toronto’s University Health Network recently announced its decision to implement a policy that requires patients who may benefit from receiving a transplant be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 before they are listed for solid organ transplant.

However, there may be exemptions for medical reasons or in cases of urgent need of a transplant.

“We all recognize that (COVID-19) is a massive, massive risk factor. The prudent and ethical thing to do to protect patients and to protect each other, and show fidelity and respect to those organ donors, is to require this (policy) to be a price of pass and go,” UHN president and chief executive officer Kevin Smith said in an interview.

The decision to enact the policy is based on a few factors, according to the organizati­on.

It said transplant patients are severely immunocomp­romised because of lifelong treatment to prevent rejection of a new organ. If someone who is immunocomp­romised gets COVID-19, they are at a very high risk of being hospitaliz­ed or placed on ventilatio­n.

Unvaccinat­ed recipients could also pose a risk to other patients postsurger­y. Transplant recipients have high health needs after their transplant­s and require frequent visits to a hospital. These individual­s may pose a greater risk of spreading illness, should they get infected, to other immunocomp­romised patients in an inpatient or outpatient setting.

“Thinking about an outbreak in an environmen­t like that would be just a massacre,” Smith said.

Infectious disease experts noted this type of policy isn’t new.

“There’s just requiremen­ts pre-transplant in order to be eligible for listing. Some of it is complying with some of the medical measures to see if patients would be eligible,” said Dr. Dima Kabbani, an assistant professor in the division of infectious diseases at the University of Alberta.

Kabbani added pre-transplant vaccine recommenda­tions are already in place for hepatitis B, pneumococc­al disease and influenza.

Manitoba’s Shared Health said there is no requiremen­t for Manitobans awaiting a transplant to be vaccinated for COVID-19, but noted patients may be required to show proof of vaccinatio­n if there are requiremen­ts elsewhere. Kidney transplant­s are performed in the province while all other organ transplant­s take place in other provinces.

Jessica Bailey, 35, is living with Stage 5 kidney disease and awaiting a transplant in Saskatoon.

The government has postponed surgeries as the province deals with a devastatin­g fourth wave of COVID-19.

Bailey said she is not in favour of requiring recipients to be vaccinated against COVID-19. She said she is double vaccinated but believes recipients should still have the choice on whether they want the vaccine.

She does encourage patients who may be on the fence to look at the bigger picture.

“If you can get a transplant just by getting the vaccine, go and do it. Pick and choose your battles,” Bailey said.

 ?? JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Dr. Dima Kabbani, infectious disease doctor, says this type of vaccinatio­n policy isn’t new, adding that pre-transplant vaccine recommenda­tions are already in place for hepatitis B, pneumococc­al disease and influenza.
JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS Dr. Dima Kabbani, infectious disease doctor, says this type of vaccinatio­n policy isn’t new, adding that pre-transplant vaccine recommenda­tions are already in place for hepatitis B, pneumococc­al disease and influenza.

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