Kidney transplantation is the optimal option for patients with an
end-stage renal
disease. The first successful transplantation with a living genetically
related donor
has been performed since 26 October 1954, when an identical twin
transplant was
performed in Boston. In the years that followed, efforts to enable
non-twin
transplants unfortunately failed because effective immunosuppression was
not yet
available. It took until the early sixties after the discovery of
azathiopirine that also
deceased donor kidney transplantations became possible. In the eighties
of the last
century the wait time for a kidney transplant was approximately one
year. Since
that time the success rate of organ transplantation has significantly
improved which
attracted large numbers of transplant candidates. As the number of
deceased
organ donors did not increase, the wait time on the list steadily grew
and at the
moment patients in most Western countries face wait times up to 5 years
before a
deceased donor kidney is offered. Unfortunately an increasing proportion
of them
will never be transplanted because their clinical situation deteriorates
to such an
extent that they are delisted or die on the wait list. For the
Netherlands we estimate
that this proportion is approximately 30%. A strategy to expand the
kidney donor
pool includes the use of non-heart beating (NHB) donors. Educational
programs in
the Netherlands have resulted in an increase in the number of kidney
transplants
derived from NHB donors from almost 20% in the year 2000 to 43% in 2004,
while
in the years that followed the numbers of NHB donors stabilized. So the
NHB
donors have not led to expansion of the deceased kidney donor pool.
Possibly
substitution from heart beating to non heart beating donation procedures
took
place, resulting from pressure on the facilities of intensive care
units. In the
Netherlands, it has been suggested that the main reason for our failure
to increase
the number of deceased organ donors is the lack of donor detection. This
is
certainly not the case; both in 2005 and in 2006 almost all potential
donors in the
Netherlands (96%) were recognized as such and for the vast majority
(86%) our
national donor registry was consulted. The problem is not donor
detection but the
high refusal rate by the next of kin, which is inherent to our legal
system. Our organ
donation act dictates an opt-in system, and therefore all adult citizens
are asked to
register their consent for the use of their organ for transplantation
purpose after
death. In the Netherlands approximately 25% of the adults are now
registered as
potential donors, 15% have explicitly refused and thus for 60% it
remains unknown.
Especially in case of potential donors of the latter category high
refusal rates up to
70% haven been found. Apparently next of kin argue that while the
possibility was
given to everybody to register as donor, their relative did not do so,
therefore they
are unaware of consent and thus reluctant to give permission for
donation. We feel
that an opt-out organ donation system would be very much helpful to
expand the
deceased kidney donor pool. However, we are aware that even if all
potential deceased donors became actual donors, there still would be a
shortage of donor
kidneys. Therefore the use of kidneys from living donors is an obvious
way to go.
These transplants result in a superior unadjusted graft survival
compared to
deceased donor kidneys. It has been calculated that the difference in 10
years
survival between living and deceased donor kidney transplantation is 34
%.
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/19544/100422_Klerk%2C%20Marry%20de.pdf
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/19544/100422_Klerk%2C%20Marry%20de.pdf
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