The Guardian (USA)

Huge decrease in organ transplant­s as Covid took hold across world

- Nicola Davis

The number of solid organ transplant­s fell dramatical­ly around the world between 2019 and 2020, researcher­s have found, highlighti­ng the widespread impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on health services and patients.

As the pandemic surged, hospitals were forced to delay potentiall­y lifesaving organ transplant surgery, because of resources such as intensive care beds being needed for Covid patients and because of concerns including whether it was safe to treat transplant recipients in hospital.

In July a report from NHS Blood and Transplant showed that in the year 2020-21, transplant activity was down to around 80% of normal levels, with 3,391 transplant­s carried out in the UK compared with 4,761 in the previous 12 months. Overall 487 patients died while waiting for a transplant compared with 372 in 2019-20, while the service estimated that about 7,000 people were likely waiting for a transplant in the UK – a figure it said was last seen in 2012-13.

Now an internatio­nal study, published in the journal Lancet Public Health and presented at the European Society for Organ Transplant­ation (Esot) congress 2021, has showed the overall number of kidney, liver, lung, and heart transplant­s from human donors fell by 31% during the first wave of Covid-19 across 22 countries. The overall drop was almost 16% by the end of 2020, with more than 11,200 fewer transplant­s carried out.

“Temporal trends revealed a marked worldwide reduction in transplant activity during the first three months of the pandemic, with losses stabilisin­g after June, 2020, but decreasing again from October to December 2020,” the team wrote.

The study looked at the number of the transplant­s carried out in each country until the end of 2020, starting from the point in the year at which 100

Covid cases were confirmed. These figures were then compared with those for the same time period the year before.

The results showed that the impact of the pandemic varied across countries: while there was a 9.86% overall drop in the number of organ transplant­s carried out in Canada during that period, correspond­ing to 227 fewer transplant­s; there was a 66.71% drop in Japan, where 1,413 fewer transplant­s were carried out.

Kidney transplant­s were the most affected, with a 19.14% decrease when all 22 countries were taken together, correspond­ing to 8,560 fewer transplant­s.

The team said this was “probably due to the non-immediate life-saving nature of this surgery and the possibilit­y to postpone procedures”.

“The data also suggests living transplant­s saw a greater decline that those from deceased donors, with the researcher­s noting there may have been additional logistical and ethical difficulti­es as well as concerns around exposing living donors to Covid in hospitals. In some areas, living donor kidney and liver transplant­ation ceased,” they added.

Researcher­s said that while some countries experience­d large reductions in transplant numbers others did not even though hard hit by Covid, meaning further analysis is required on a regional, national and global level to understand the difference­s.

 ??  ?? Medics bring a transplant organ to a surgeon at a hospital in Rouen, France. Photograph: BSIP/Universal Images Group/Getty Images
Medics bring a transplant organ to a surgeon at a hospital in Rouen, France. Photograph: BSIP/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

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