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Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO, OneLegacy
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Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

Mar 29, 2015

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Page 1: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests

of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction

Thomas Mone, MSCEO, OneLegacy

Page 2: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

US Kidney Allocation: A Fundamental Problem

Remarkable waste of kidneys from older donors

Page 3: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

Why Do We Discard So Many More Kidneys Than Europe?

• EuroTrans Old-for-Old System (65+ Donors to 65+ Recipients) prompts older recipients and their MDs to accept older donor kidneys.

• In the US, waiting time is the primary allocation determinant. A 65+ Recipient who is offered a kidney from a 65+ Donor will wait for an offer of a younger kidney within the next several weeks.

• Older kidneys are too frequently discarded or sometimes not even recovered.

Page 4: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

How Did We Let This Waste Happen?

• When kidney allocation was first debated, efforts to identify predictors of graft survival were without adequate experiential data.

• Community opted for the predictive power of HLA matching to maximize graft survival to address the ethical concept of maximizing Utility.

• To ensure Justice, waiting time was chosen to ensure offers were fair across age, gender, race, and economic differences

Page 5: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

What’s Wrong with HLA?

• Nothing really, except HLA is no longer the powerful predictor of graft survival nor patient survival it once was:– HLA was never all that powerful a predictor of graft survival, as it always

had limited value at 1-5 antigen matches and it was never paired with age factors so it allowed young donor kidneys to go to older recipients

– Advances in immunosuppression have made all HLA essentially non-predictive of graft and patient survival in all but zero-mismatch cases

– Adding DPI-EPTS supplements HLA and provides tremendous predictive power to maximize graft life (not as much as LYFT would have, but a dramatic improvement)

Page 6: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

What’s Wrong with Waiting Time?

• Waiting Time may ensure equality of access within a region or a DSA, but

• Waiting Time can vary by 4-5 times and 5-10 years longer between regions and DSAs due to:– Widely disproportionate list sizes – Widely varied donor potential due to varying death and disease

rates – Moderate variation in donation consent rates

• This disparity is not addressed in this concept, but can be reduced if more older kidneys are transplanted

Page 7: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

How Does DPI-EPTS Help?

• Maximizes graft survival– Reduces rejection, sensitization, re-transplant of

better-matched donors and recipients• Reduces CIT and resulting DGF– Less reliance on time-consuming subjective

assessment of donor-recipient compatibility– Less time wasted offering older organs to younger

patients

• Increase Organ Utilization– Older donor organs less likely to be bypassed

Page 8: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

How Will DPI-EPTS Affect the Older Recipient Population?

• UNOS Data is inadequate to model due to high older donor discard and non-utilization rates

• German/EuroTransplant Data demonstrates the benefits: – First Year Study: “86% 1-Year Graft Survival vs 79% control; reduced

CIT”– Five Year Study: “Since initiation of the ESP (1999), availability of

elderly donors doubled and waiting time for ESP patients decreased. Local allocation led to shorter cold ischemia time (11.9 vs. >17.0 h, p < 0.001) and less delayed graft function (DGF, ESP 29.7% vs. O/A 36.2%, p = 0.047) but 5-10% higher rejection rates. Graft and patient survival were not negatively affected by the ESP allocation when compared to the standard allocation.”

– Ten Year Study: waiting time for the recipient in the ESP program was shortened significantly by more than 1 year. Also the shipping time was to > 6 h significantly shorter.

Page 9: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

EuroTrans Predicted Benefits of DPI-EPTS

• Increased Organ Availability +• More Transplants +• Decreased Waiting Times for old and young +• Decreased CIT +• Equivalent 1 year graft survival +• Decreased Younger Recipient Graft Loss +• Decreased Recipient Sensitization +• Increased Older Recipient 3-5 year Graft Failure –

Page 10: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

Translating from the German Experience

• While the German Old-for-Old system is more extreme than DPI-EPTS, it reasonably predicts that we will see decreased discards, more transplants, increased overall graft survival, while DPI-EPTS broader age bands will limit the graft loss associated with the use of dramatically older organs

Page 11: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

Ethical Implications of DPI-EPTS

• Utility Benefits – Increased utilization of older donor kidneys– Reduced CIT– Reduced waiting time– Improved prediction of graft function– Increased life years from transplant

Page 12: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

Ethical Implications of DPI-EPTS

• Justice Benefits– Reduced graft loss, sensitization, and re-transplant

benefit younger recipients harmed by current system– Increased transplants and reduced waiting time for

older recipients offset the loss of access to younger donor organs

Page 13: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

What Do Donor Families Have to Say?

• The question of DPI-EPTS hasn’t been asked of them, but when asked what they hope for when they choose to donate they offer:– Save as many lives as possible, for as long as possible– Keep my loved one’s organ functioning as long as possible

• DPI-EPTS fulfills these two goals– Transplants MORE organs– Reduces overall graft loss– Increases lives saved and years of organ function

Page 14: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

Is DPI-EPTS the Ideal Solution?

• Will DPI-EPTS reduce discard rates as much as the German Old-for-Old? No, not as much but it can be predicted to decrease waiting time, reduce CIT, and lower discard rates.

• Will DPI-EPTS save as many lives, shorten waiting time, and maximize graft life as much as LYFT would, No, but…for a community that has an appropriate history of caution when fiddling with human lives, it is a meaningful incremental step that will extend graft life and save lives.

• Will DPI-EPTS end the demographic and geographic inequality? No, that will have to be another days work.

Page 15: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

What’s the Bottom Line of this Debate?

… If the primary goals of the balancing of utility and justice in organ allocation are – (1) ending deaths on the waitlist– (2) increasing overall graft survival, and – (3) fulfilling and honoring the wishes of the donors and

donor families who make donation possible

… DPI-EPTS is a significant step forward and it is time to move it from concept to policy.

Page 16: Why Waiting Time and HLA No Longer Fulfill the Ethical Tests of Utility and Justice and DPI-EPTS is a Step in the Right Direction Thomas Mone, MS CEO,

Bibliography• Hippen, et al; Risk, Prognosis, and Unintended Consequences in Kidney Allocation; New England Journal of Medicine 364;14 nejm.org April 7, 2011,

pg.1285• Leichtman, et al; Improving the Allocation System for Deceased-Donor Kidneys; New England Journal of Medicine 364;14 nejm.org April 7, 2011,

pg.1287• UNOS Kidney Concept Document; http://optn.transplant.hrsa.gov/SharedContentDocuments/KidneyConceptDocument.PDF; accessed 4/25/11• Smits, et al; Evaluation of the Eurotransplant Senior Program. The Results of the First Year; American Journal of Transplantation 2002; 2: 000-000• Smits et al; Urgency, chance of success, equal opportunities, principles and practice of distribution, gross donated organs in Germany; Intensivmed

42: 489-495 (2005) DOI 10.1007/s00390-005-0609-6• Schmidt; Distributive Justice in Kidney Allocation; Analyse & Kritij 23/2001; p.286-298• Kirste, et al; Organ Donation and Transplant in Germany; http://sysnews.multimodo.com/compoweb/590/File/DSO_JB2005_englisch.pdf; accessed

4/25/2011• Frei et al; Prospective Age-Matching in Elderly Kidney Transplant Recipients—A 5-Year Analysis of the Eurotransplant Senior Program; American

Journal of Transplantation 2008; 8: 50–57• Marckmann; The Eurotransplant Kidney Allocation Algorithm-Moral Consensus or Pragmatic Compromise; Analyse & Kritik 23/2001; p. 271-279• Glessing; 10 Year Eurotransplant Senior Program, Urologe 2009 · 48:1429–1437; DOI 10.1007/s00120-009-2155-5; Online publiziert: 11. November

2009; © Springer Medizin Verlag 2009• Hippen; The Kidney Allocation Score: Methodological Problems, Moral Concerns and Unintended Consequences; American Journal of Transplantation

2009; 9: 1507–1512• Scarantino; INDUCTIVE RISK AND JUSTICE IN KIDNEY ALLOCATION; Bioethics ISSN 0269-9702 (print); 1467-8519 (online), Volume 24 Number 8 2010

pp 421–430• Tong et al; Community Preferences for the Allocation of Solid Organs for Transplantation: A Systematic Review; Transplantation • Volume 89,

Number 7, April 15, 2010; pg 796• Rahmel; Impact of Different Kidney Allocation Systems;