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CITATION:
Klein AS, Messersmith EE, Ratner LE, Kochik R, Baliga PK, Ojo AO. Organ donation and utilization in the United States, 1999-2008. Am J Transplant 2010; 10 (4 part 2): 973-986
ABSTRACT:
Despite the Organ Donation Breakthrough Collaborative’s
work to engage the transplant community and
the suggested positive impact fromthese efforts, availability
of transplanted organs over the past 5 years
has declined. Living kidney, liver and lung donations
declined from 2004 to 2008. Living liver donors in
2008 dropped to less than 50% of the peak (524) in
2001. There were more living donors that were older
and who were unrelated to the recipient. Percentages
of living donors from racial minorities remained unchanged
over the past 5 years, but percentages of Hispanic/
Latino and Asian donors increased, and African
American donors decreased. The OPTN/UNOS Living
Donor Transplant Committee restructured to enfranchise
organ donors and recipients, and to seek their
perspectives on living donor transplantation. In 2008,
for the first time in OPTN history, deceased donor organs
decreased compared to the prior year. Except for
lung donors, deceased organ donation fell from 2007
to 2008. Donation after cardiac death (DCD) has accounted
for a nearly 10-fold increase in kidney donors
from 1999 to 2008. Use of livers from DCD donors declined
in 2008 to 2005 levels. Understanding health
risks associated with the transplantation of organs
from ‘high-risk’ donors has received increased scrutiny.
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