Guest guest Posted January 9, 2004 Report Share Posted January 9, 2004 New Liver Transplant Policy Helps Cancer Patients Thu January 8, 2004 09:20 PM ET By Karla Gale NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - After the United Network of Organ Sharing implemented a new allocation policy in 2002 increasing the priority of patients with liver cancer, these patients have become more likely to survive until liver transplantation and to be well enough to survive the procedure, according to a new study published in the journal Liver Transplantation. In February 27, 2002, the Network implemented a new allocation policy giving priority to patients with liver cancer. Up until this change, " when we prioritized these patients, they may not have gotten the highest priority score, " coauthor Dr. Vijayan Balan told Reuters Health. " But by the time they get sick enough to generate a high priority score, the cancer has advanced so much that they can't be transplanted, and that's the reason why UNOS decided to give them a priority score, " he said. Balan and his team evaluated the impact of the change on patients with liver cancer. Included were 912 patients listed before the change, 805 who were listed prior to the policy change but who survived beyond this date, and 357 listed after the policy change took effect. The percentage of transplant candidates with liver cancer who dropped out of waiting lists because of clinical deterioration or death declined from 25.9 percent before the change, to 8.0 percent for those in the overlap period, and 6.7 percent in the post-change time period. The average time to transplant dropped from 2.28 years prior to the change to 0.69 years afterward. According to Balan, the new policy " has made it more fair, in the sense that the patients who are most in need of a liver transplant are getting a liver. I do not think it has affected the survival of other (liver disease) patients at all. " Out of concern that candidates with liver cancer were being given excessive priority, the Network decreased their priority score somewhat, effective February, 2003. Although the effect of this change on patients' survival has yet to be investigated, " my suspicion is that it will not adversely affect the patients with liver cancer, " Balan added. SOURCE: Liver Transplantation, January 2004. © Reuters 2004. . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 9, 2004 Report Share Posted January 9, 2004 New Liver Transplant Policy Helps Cancer Patients Thu January 8, 2004 09:20 PM ET By Karla Gale NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - After the United Network of Organ Sharing implemented a new allocation policy in 2002 increasing the priority of patients with liver cancer, these patients have become more likely to survive until liver transplantation and to be well enough to survive the procedure, according to a new study published in the journal Liver Transplantation. In February 27, 2002, the Network implemented a new allocation policy giving priority to patients with liver cancer. Up until this change, " when we prioritized these patients, they may not have gotten the highest priority score, " coauthor Dr. Vijayan Balan told Reuters Health. " But by the time they get sick enough to generate a high priority score, the cancer has advanced so much that they can't be transplanted, and that's the reason why UNOS decided to give them a priority score, " he said. Balan and his team evaluated the impact of the change on patients with liver cancer. Included were 912 patients listed before the change, 805 who were listed prior to the policy change but who survived beyond this date, and 357 listed after the policy change took effect. The percentage of transplant candidates with liver cancer who dropped out of waiting lists because of clinical deterioration or death declined from 25.9 percent before the change, to 8.0 percent for those in the overlap period, and 6.7 percent in the post-change time period. The average time to transplant dropped from 2.28 years prior to the change to 0.69 years afterward. According to Balan, the new policy " has made it more fair, in the sense that the patients who are most in need of a liver transplant are getting a liver. I do not think it has affected the survival of other (liver disease) patients at all. " Out of concern that candidates with liver cancer were being given excessive priority, the Network decreased their priority score somewhat, effective February, 2003. Although the effect of this change on patients' survival has yet to be investigated, " my suspicion is that it will not adversely affect the patients with liver cancer, " Balan added. SOURCE: Liver Transplantation, January 2004. © Reuters 2004. . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 9, 2004 Report Share Posted January 9, 2004 New Liver Transplant Policy Helps Cancer Patients Thu January 8, 2004 09:20 PM ET By Karla Gale NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - After the United Network of Organ Sharing implemented a new allocation policy in 2002 increasing the priority of patients with liver cancer, these patients have become more likely to survive until liver transplantation and to be well enough to survive the procedure, according to a new study published in the journal Liver Transplantation. In February 27, 2002, the Network implemented a new allocation policy giving priority to patients with liver cancer. Up until this change, " when we prioritized these patients, they may not have gotten the highest priority score, " coauthor Dr. Vijayan Balan told Reuters Health. " But by the time they get sick enough to generate a high priority score, the cancer has advanced so much that they can't be transplanted, and that's the reason why UNOS decided to give them a priority score, " he said. Balan and his team evaluated the impact of the change on patients with liver cancer. Included were 912 patients listed before the change, 805 who were listed prior to the policy change but who survived beyond this date, and 357 listed after the policy change took effect. The percentage of transplant candidates with liver cancer who dropped out of waiting lists because of clinical deterioration or death declined from 25.9 percent before the change, to 8.0 percent for those in the overlap period, and 6.7 percent in the post-change time period. The average time to transplant dropped from 2.28 years prior to the change to 0.69 years afterward. According to Balan, the new policy " has made it more fair, in the sense that the patients who are most in need of a liver transplant are getting a liver. I do not think it has affected the survival of other (liver disease) patients at all. " Out of concern that candidates with liver cancer were being given excessive priority, the Network decreased their priority score somewhat, effective February, 2003. Although the effect of this change on patients' survival has yet to be investigated, " my suspicion is that it will not adversely affect the patients with liver cancer, " Balan added. SOURCE: Liver Transplantation, January 2004. © Reuters 2004. . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 9, 2004 Report Share Posted January 9, 2004 New Liver Transplant Policy Helps Cancer Patients Thu January 8, 2004 09:20 PM ET By Karla Gale NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - After the United Network of Organ Sharing implemented a new allocation policy in 2002 increasing the priority of patients with liver cancer, these patients have become more likely to survive until liver transplantation and to be well enough to survive the procedure, according to a new study published in the journal Liver Transplantation. In February 27, 2002, the Network implemented a new allocation policy giving priority to patients with liver cancer. Up until this change, " when we prioritized these patients, they may not have gotten the highest priority score, " coauthor Dr. Vijayan Balan told Reuters Health. " But by the time they get sick enough to generate a high priority score, the cancer has advanced so much that they can't be transplanted, and that's the reason why UNOS decided to give them a priority score, " he said. Balan and his team evaluated the impact of the change on patients with liver cancer. Included were 912 patients listed before the change, 805 who were listed prior to the policy change but who survived beyond this date, and 357 listed after the policy change took effect. The percentage of transplant candidates with liver cancer who dropped out of waiting lists because of clinical deterioration or death declined from 25.9 percent before the change, to 8.0 percent for those in the overlap period, and 6.7 percent in the post-change time period. The average time to transplant dropped from 2.28 years prior to the change to 0.69 years afterward. According to Balan, the new policy " has made it more fair, in the sense that the patients who are most in need of a liver transplant are getting a liver. I do not think it has affected the survival of other (liver disease) patients at all. " Out of concern that candidates with liver cancer were being given excessive priority, the Network decreased their priority score somewhat, effective February, 2003. Although the effect of this change on patients' survival has yet to be investigated, " my suspicion is that it will not adversely affect the patients with liver cancer, " Balan added. SOURCE: Liver Transplantation, January 2004. © Reuters 2004. . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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