1. Effect of match-run frequencies on the number of transplants and waiting times in kidney exchange.
- Author
-
Ashlagi I, Bingaman A, Burq M, Manshadi V, Gamarnik D, Murphey C, Roth AE, Melcher ML, and Rees MA
- Subjects
- Humans, Registries, United States, Waiting Lists, Algorithms, Donor Selection methods, Histocompatibility Testing methods, Kidney Transplantation, Living Donors supply & distribution, Tissue and Organ Procurement organization & administration
- Abstract
Numerous kidney exchange (kidney paired donation [KPD]) registries in the United States have gradually shifted to high-frequency match-runs, raising the question of whether this harms the number of transplants. We conducted simulations using clinical data from 2 KPD registries-the Alliance for Paired Donation, which runs multihospital exchanges, and Methodist San Antonio, which runs single-center exchanges-to study how the frequency of match-runs impacts the number of transplants and the average waiting times. We simulate the options facing each of the 2 registries by repeated resampling from their historical pools of patient-donor pairs and nondirected donors, with arrival and departure rates corresponding to the historical data. We find that longer intervals between match-runs do not increase the total number of transplants, and that prioritizing highly sensitized patients is more effective than waiting longer between match-runs for transplanting highly sensitized patients. While we do not find that frequent match-runs result in fewer transplanted pairs, we do find that increasing arrival rates of new pairs improves both the fraction of transplanted pairs and waiting times., (© 2017 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF