Kidney Paired Donation: A Payer Perspective

Kidney transplantation is the most cost‐effective and clinically effective form of renal replacement therapy. Due to long wait times for deceased donors, kidney transplantation is not available to many patients with incompatible living donors. Increased access to kidney transplantation is a shared g...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of transplantation 2012-06, Vol.12 (6), p.1388-1391
Hauptverfasser: Irwin, F. D., Bonagura, A. F., Crawford, S. W., Foote, M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Kidney transplantation is the most cost‐effective and clinically effective form of renal replacement therapy. Due to long wait times for deceased donors, kidney transplantation is not available to many patients with incompatible living donors. Increased access to kidney transplantation is a shared goal that can be achieved through kidney paired donation (KPD). A single, national system of KPD administered to a set of clinical and ethical standards determined by a consensus of stakeholders including recipients, donors, providers, payers and the United States federal government will provide the best opportunity to offer kidney transplantation to the most people and particularly to those currently unlikely to receive a transplant. We propose that this system will use uniform tissue typing algorithms and a computerized donor and recipient matching program using a national pool of willing donors. The proposed system can be managed best through a single administrative structure that takes advantage of uniform donor evaluation and management with a standardized organ acquisition charge that recognizes that the current lack of standardization contributes to delays in transplantation and payment to programs. This program will use the existing Organ Procurement Organization infrastructure to manage the logistics of organ acquisition, transportation and billing. The authors, representing three large commercial payers for kidney transplant in the United States, support increasing the number of living donor kidney transplants through the development of a single national program for kidney paired donation that incorporates a system of standardized donor selection, evaluation and matching of donors and recipients under a standardized acquisition charge model.
ISSN:1600-6135
1600-6143
DOI:10.1111/j.1600-6143.2012.03998.x