Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 > Where you live drives wait for liver transplants > > [AP] > > By LAURAN NEERGAARD, AP Medical Writer n Neergaard, Ap Medical > Writer – Mon Feb 14, 4:51 pm ET > > WASHINGTON – Doctors dropped another bomb soon after telling > Rosiello it was time for a liver > transplant: > The 21-year-old isn't likely to get one any time soon in his home state > of New York. Consider traveling to Ohio, they advised, where the wait's > a lot shorter. > > Where you live plays a big role in how sick you are, and how long you > wait, before getting a scarce liver transplant — if you survive long > enough. Now the network that runs the U.S. organ transplant system is > exploring steps to ease some of the disparities. Critics who want more > nationwide sharing of donated livers fear any changes won't help > enough. > > " I'll go anywhere for my son. This is his life, " says 's mother, > Randy Rosiello of New York City, who has begun researching waiting > lists from Ohio to North Carolina as the family debates its next step. > > But she doesn't think her son should have to leave his doctors at New > York's Mount > Sinai > Medical Center, or undergo the stress of travel. Plus, she worries, " if > I have to go, I'm putting my family into financial ruin. " > > The nation has a severe shortage of donated livers. More than 16,000 > people are awaiting a liver transplant, and just 6,300 a year get one. > More than 1,400 others die waiting each year. > > Since 2002, the sickest patients have been ranked atop waiting lists to > receive a liver from a deceased donor. They're given a so-called MELD > score, based on laboratory > tests, > that predicts their risk of death. Rising scores move them up on the > waiting list. The change by all accounts has greatly improved the > system, which once was based instead on time spent waiting. > > Here's the lingering trouble: Patients with liver > failure > and would-be donors are not distributed evenly around the country. And > the nation is divided into 11 transplant regions that have wide > variations in patients and available organs, between regions and within > them. > > A donated liver is offered first to the sickest patients in the local > transplant center, and if there's no good match, then to the sickest > patients throughout that transplant region. If there's still no good > match, the liver can go to someone who's not as sick — rather than to > someone sicker in the next transplant region. > > Patients can shop around for shorter lines, even get on more than one > list, if they have the means to get to a far-away hospital within hours > of a liver becoming available. For instance, Apple CEO Steve Jobs' 2009 > liver transplant was in Tennessee, where the wait was much shorter than > back home in California. > > But Mount Sinai liver transplant chief Dr. Sander Florman says that > system isn't fair to those who can't afford to maximize their chances. > > " If a patient can get on an airplane and go to Florida, why can't the > liver get on an airplane and come to New York? " he asks. > > For patients like Rosiello, the news that New Yorkers wait > longer for a liver complicates already agonizing treatment choices. > > When he was a baby, Rosiello had complex liver surgery for a rare birth > defect, biliary atresia, and more surgery a few years ago that > postponed a transplant. But now repeated liver infections and other > complications have put him in the hospital three times in about a > month, require IV care and forced him to quit college. Still, his MELD > score is low, something doctors warn could change rapidly — but that > also means he should consider a place with a shorter wait. > > " He's frightened to death, " says Randy Rosiello as the family peruses > an Internet database — the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients > — that compares wait times and success rates. > > How big are the differences? The United Network for Organ > Sharing > says that in three regions stretching from Ohio down through Tennessee > and on to Florida, adults receiving new livers in the past year had > median MELD scores of 23 to 24. But in the New York and western Vermont > region, liver recipients were far sicker, with a median score of 32. > Only the region that includes California fared worse, with 37. > > Within regions, rates of people who die on the waiting list or become > too sick to transplant range from fewer than 10 percent to more than 25 > percent each year. > > So UNOS' liver committee is seeking feedback from transplant > centers > about options to improve, in hopes of proposing changes later this > year. > > Topping the list: If a liver isn't a good match to the sickest patients > within one region — as measured by a MELD of 15 or more — offer it > nationwide before giving it to a less sick local patient. > > But small steps won't help the toughest regions, contends Mount Sinai's > Florman. > > New York transplant centers suggest splitting the country into four or > five " super regions " where the sickest patients in the entire zone > would get first dibs. No, livers don't last outside the body as long as > kidneys that often are shipped long distances. But Florman says his > hospital successfully flies in livers from Florida that hospitals there > turn down as less-than-optimal — because, say, the donor was elderly — > meaning better organs should have no problem. > > And often less-than-optimal organs go to waste, because of restrictions > on when hospitals can take a chance with them, adds Dr. Fishbein > of town University Hospital in Washington, D.C., another hard-hit > area. > > Bigger moves would encounter more resistance, cautions Dr. > Washburn of the University of Texas Health Science Center, who chairs > UNOS' liver committee and views modest change as an important first > step. A proposal for regional sharing that skipped the local transplant > center prompted " a lightning rod " of objections from hospitals that > stood to lose organs, he says. > > Indeed, centers with shorter waits say they do a good job of > encouraging organ donations and other regions should try to improve. > > " If you equate it to hunger, people try to figure out how to come up > with more food, not which kid gets the sandwich, " says Dr. ph > Tector, transplant chief at Indiana University Health. > > While short-term relief is needed, more organ donation is the long-term > answer, agrees town's Fishbein: " It's only because we're so short > of livers that we fight over the livers that are there. " > > ___ > > EDITOR'S NOTE — n Neergaard covers health and medical issues for > The Associated Press in Washington. > > Online: > > Transplant center data: > http://www.srtr.org > > United Network for Organ Sharing: > http://www.unos.org > > ___ > > Online: > > http://www.srtr.org > > http://www.unos.org > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 > Where you live drives wait for liver transplants > > [AP] > > By LAURAN NEERGAARD, AP Medical Writer n Neergaard, Ap Medical > Writer – Mon Feb 14, 4:51 pm ET > > WASHINGTON – Doctors dropped another bomb soon after telling > Rosiello it was time for a liver > transplant: > The 21-year-old isn't likely to get one any time soon in his home state > of New York. Consider traveling to Ohio, they advised, where the wait's > a lot shorter. > > Where you live plays a big role in how sick you are, and how long you > wait, before getting a scarce liver transplant — if you survive long > enough. Now the network that runs the U.S. organ transplant system is > exploring steps to ease some of the disparities. Critics who want more > nationwide sharing of donated livers fear any changes won't help > enough. > > " I'll go anywhere for my son. This is his life, " says 's mother, > Randy Rosiello of New York City, who has begun researching waiting > lists from Ohio to North Carolina as the family debates its next step. > > But she doesn't think her son should have to leave his doctors at New > York's Mount > Sinai > Medical Center, or undergo the stress of travel. Plus, she worries, " if > I have to go, I'm putting my family into financial ruin. " > > The nation has a severe shortage of donated livers. More than 16,000 > people are awaiting a liver transplant, and just 6,300 a year get one. > More than 1,400 others die waiting each year. > > Since 2002, the sickest patients have been ranked atop waiting lists to > receive a liver from a deceased donor. They're given a so-called MELD > score, based on laboratory > tests, > that predicts their risk of death. Rising scores move them up on the > waiting list. The change by all accounts has greatly improved the > system, which once was based instead on time spent waiting. > > Here's the lingering trouble: Patients with liver > failure > and would-be donors are not distributed evenly around the country. And > the nation is divided into 11 transplant regions that have wide > variations in patients and available organs, between regions and within > them. > > A donated liver is offered first to the sickest patients in the local > transplant center, and if there's no good match, then to the sickest > patients throughout that transplant region. If there's still no good > match, the liver can go to someone who's not as sick — rather than to > someone sicker in the next transplant region. > > Patients can shop around for shorter lines, even get on more than one > list, if they have the means to get to a far-away hospital within hours > of a liver becoming available. For instance, Apple CEO Steve Jobs' 2009 > liver transplant was in Tennessee, where the wait was much shorter than > back home in California. > > But Mount Sinai liver transplant chief Dr. Sander Florman says that > system isn't fair to those who can't afford to maximize their chances. > > " If a patient can get on an airplane and go to Florida, why can't the > liver get on an airplane and come to New York? " he asks. > > For patients like Rosiello, the news that New Yorkers wait > longer for a liver complicates already agonizing treatment choices. > > When he was a baby, Rosiello had complex liver surgery for a rare birth > defect, biliary atresia, and more surgery a few years ago that > postponed a transplant. But now repeated liver infections and other > complications have put him in the hospital three times in about a > month, require IV care and forced him to quit college. Still, his MELD > score is low, something doctors warn could change rapidly — but that > also means he should consider a place with a shorter wait. > > " He's frightened to death, " says Randy Rosiello as the family peruses > an Internet database — the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients > — that compares wait times and success rates. > > How big are the differences? The United Network for Organ > Sharing > says that in three regions stretching from Ohio down through Tennessee > and on to Florida, adults receiving new livers in the past year had > median MELD scores of 23 to 24. But in the New York and western Vermont > region, liver recipients were far sicker, with a median score of 32. > Only the region that includes California fared worse, with 37. > > Within regions, rates of people who die on the waiting list or become > too sick to transplant range from fewer than 10 percent to more than 25 > percent each year. > > So UNOS' liver committee is seeking feedback from transplant > centers > about options to improve, in hopes of proposing changes later this > year. > > Topping the list: If a liver isn't a good match to the sickest patients > within one region — as measured by a MELD of 15 or more — offer it > nationwide before giving it to a less sick local patient. > > But small steps won't help the toughest regions, contends Mount Sinai's > Florman. > > New York transplant centers suggest splitting the country into four or > five " super regions " where the sickest patients in the entire zone > would get first dibs. No, livers don't last outside the body as long as > kidneys that often are shipped long distances. But Florman says his > hospital successfully flies in livers from Florida that hospitals there > turn down as less-than-optimal — because, say, the donor was elderly — > meaning better organs should have no problem. > > And often less-than-optimal organs go to waste, because of restrictions > on when hospitals can take a chance with them, adds Dr. Fishbein > of town University Hospital in Washington, D.C., another hard-hit > area. > > Bigger moves would encounter more resistance, cautions Dr. > Washburn of the University of Texas Health Science Center, who chairs > UNOS' liver committee and views modest change as an important first > step. A proposal for regional sharing that skipped the local transplant > center prompted " a lightning rod " of objections from hospitals that > stood to lose organs, he says. > > Indeed, centers with shorter waits say they do a good job of > encouraging organ donations and other regions should try to improve. > > " If you equate it to hunger, people try to figure out how to come up > with more food, not which kid gets the sandwich, " says Dr. ph > Tector, transplant chief at Indiana University Health. > > While short-term relief is needed, more organ donation is the long-term > answer, agrees town's Fishbein: " It's only because we're so short > of livers that we fight over the livers that are there. " > > ___ > > EDITOR'S NOTE — n Neergaard covers health and medical issues for > The Associated Press in Washington. > > Online: > > Transplant center data: > http://www.srtr.org > > United Network for Organ Sharing: > http://www.unos.org > > ___ > > Online: > > http://www.srtr.org > > http://www.unos.org > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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