Transplantation Direct (Jun 2024)

Deceased Donors With HIV in the Era of the HOPE Act: Referrals and Procurement

  • Tao Liang, MSPH,
  • Jordan H. Salas, BS, MCR,
  • Mary G. Bowring, MPH,
  • Oyinkan Kusemiju, MPH,
  • Brittany Barnaba, MS,
  • Matthew Wingler, CPTC,
  • Deborah McRann, MBA,
  • Alghidak Salama, MD, MPA,
  • R. Patrick Wood, MD,
  • Allan Massie, PhD,
  • William Werbel, MD, PhD,
  • Aaron A. R. Tobian, MD, PhD,
  • Dorry L. Segev, MD, PhD,
  • Christine M. Durand, MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/TXD.0000000000001641
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. e1641

Abstract

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Background. The HIV Organ Policy Equity Act legalizes organ procurement from donors with HIV (HIV D+). A prior survey of Organ Procurement Organizations (OPOs) estimated >2000 HIV D+ referrals/year; however, only 30–35 HIV D+/year have had organs procured. Given this gap, we sought to understand HIV D+ referrals and procurements in practice. Methods. We prospectively collected data on all OPO-reported HIV D+ referrals, including reasons for nonprocurement. We evaluated trends and compared HIV D+ characteristics by procurement status using regression, chi-squared tests, and Wilcoxon rank-sum tests. Results. From December 23, 2015 to May 31, 2021, there were 710 HIV D+ referrals from 49 OPOs, of which 171 (24%) had organs procured. HIV D+ referrals increased from 7 to 15 per month (P < 0.001), and the procurement rate increased from 10% to 39% (P < 0.001). Compared with HIV D+ without procurement, HIV D+ with procurement were younger (median age 36 versus 50 y), more commonly White (46% versus 36%), and more often had trauma-related deaths (29% versus 8%) (all P < 0.001). Nonprocurement was attributed to medical reasons in 63% of cases, of which 36% were AIDS-defining infections and 64% were HIV-unrelated, commonly due to organ failure (36%), high neurologic function (31%), and cancer (14%). Nonprocurement was attributed to nonmedical reasons in 26% of cases, commonly due to no authorization (42%), no waitlist candidates (21%), or no transplant center interest (20%). Conclusions. In the early years of the HIV Organ Policy Equity Act, actual HIV D+ referrals were much lower than prior estimates; however, the numbers and procurement rates increased over time. Nonprocurement was attributed to both medical and nonmedical issues, and addressing these issues could increase organ availability.