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Liver Transplant Wait Depends On Where You Live

LAURAN NEERGAARD   02/14/11 04:51 PM ET   AP

Liver Transplant

WASHINGTON — Doctors dropped another bomb soon after telling Matthew 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 Matthew'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 Matthew 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. Thomas Fishbein of Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, D.C., another hard-hit area.

Bigger moves would encounter more resistance, cautions Dr. Kenneth 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. Joseph Tector, transplant chief at Indiana University Health.

While short-term relief is needed, more organ donation is the long-term answer, agrees Georgetown's Fishbein: "It's only because we're so short of livers that we fight over the livers that are there."

___

EDITOR'S NOTE – Lauran 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

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WASHINGTON — Doctors dropped another bomb soon after telling Matthew 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 Y...
WASHINGTON — Doctors dropped another bomb soon after telling Matthew 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 Y...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GreenKate
03:14 AM on 02/19/2011
Those who say being an organ donor should be compulsory are too trusting. How do you know you won't arrive at the hospital unconscious and without any family to look after your well being, just as some VIP who is a perfect match is waiting nearby for an organ donation?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R2D2-51
Flower Power Forever
01:09 PM on 02/17/2011
What are the leading causes of those requiring a liver transplant and what steps are being taken to reduce the requirements?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GreenKate
03:03 AM on 02/19/2011
Hep C. It can be passed from mother to child during childbirth and also can be sexually transmitted. Millions have it, the numbers are growing, most don't know how they got it. Your liver can also easily be damaged by medications such as tylenol or being exposed to toxins. Early detection is desirable. As for what is being done, the GOP is working their hearts out to defund everything that might arrest the spread of this terrible disease. They want to shut down clinics, repeal healthcare reform, get regulators off the backs of industry so they can manufacture whatever they want without safety inspections, warnings or lawsuits.
12:25 PM on 02/17/2011
I'm really surprised there is such a shortage of liver transplants. Livers have an amazing regenerative ability. I can give you half of mine and then mine will regenerate. I don't lose my liver and you get a liver.
01:01 PM on 02/17/2011
Not everyone who is waiting for a liver tx can have a partial tx. My daughter has been waiting for over a year, and because of her disorder, can only receive a full liver, which has to come from a cadaver organ donor.
07:46 PM on 02/17/2011
Time for some more research funding then.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bjefrz
http://twentyfiveseventeen.blogspot.com
05:55 PM on 02/16/2011
The problem is shortage of donated organs. I propose one or more of the following solutions:

- preference to donated organs goes to people who themselves are registered organ donors.

- your health insurance will only pay for your organ transplant if you are a registered donor.

- everyone is a registered donor unless they get on a list of "non-donors". In which case, they would be ineligible to receive an organ if they should need one.

Once any one (or preferably all) of the above solutions were implemented, we'd have no shortage of donor organs.
Hookedonfashion
You can't judge a book by its cover, or its name.
07:31 PM on 02/17/2011
What if you have a medical condition that doesn't allow you to be an organ or blood donor?
04:09 AM on 02/16/2011
Celebrities like Steve Jobs and Mickey Mantle get livers. Others wait and wait. Compensation for donors or their families could make body parts available. This is a capitalist society and everyone needs money. Surgeons, hospitals and insurance companies are compensated, why not donors?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GreenKate
03:06 AM on 02/19/2011
Unethical to compromise the survival of someone because he or she is in dire need of money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
msstrick40
OBAMA 2012..and you know this.
01:54 AM on 02/16/2011
I think good education and some type of reassurance is the key to encouraging people to donate. If you've ever set down and talk to or question people in regards to their apprehension to donate....you may find that some have, in their way, valid reasons..and a little education may be the key.

Some people believe that if they have their DL signed in regards to donating...if they are in an accident or situation where life saving measures have to be taken....they may not be....or not to the extent of what would be taken if they weren't a donor.

I know it may sound archaic...but people do have these reservations (especially minorities)....so education and reassurance is the key.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Susan Shaffer
tell me from the beginning
02:31 AM on 02/16/2011
the way around that is to make it compulsory and then you have to opt out
done in europe
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheLastLuddite
09:21 PM on 02/16/2011
No way, Jose...the government should NEVER cross the "line of the flesh". Government coercion regarding ownership of bodies and forcible donations of tissues and organs is absolutely unconscionable.

This is the one rights-based bulwark against compulsory (or forbidden) gestation and childbirth, against anti-gay legislation, against forced/compulsory medical treatment....

Yes, this issue of insufficient organ donation is infuriating, but your proposed solution is even worse than the original problem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Oceras
A little inductive reasoning is a dangerous thing.
12:49 AM on 02/16/2011
If we had true single-payer health care, disparities like these would not exist. Let's hear it for disjointed healthcare. Bleat!
hfpf
Wake up World.
12:36 AM on 02/16/2011
I think each state should pass a law that says if you want a driver's license, you must agree to be an organ donor, unless there is a mitigating circumstance which precludes your organs from being donated. I realize that many of you are going to scream that the govt should stay out of our lives, and leave personal decisions to individuals. But think about it, what good do your organs do you if you are brain dead? Also think about how many lives could be saved, if organ donation was mandatory. Money would not be the deciding factor in who got to live.
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alongst
too often denied to speak
12:25 AM on 02/16/2011
If New York has a much bigger population than, say, Ohio, why are organs so hard to get there? Could it be lack of donors? Shouldn't be, since New York is a blue state and full of libs and Ohio is a red state, full of greedy mean conservatives ! Why do New Yorkers refuse to donate ?
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alienator
the irony of the right is entertainment enough
10:26 PM on 02/15/2011
ask steve jobs how long it takes
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GirlOutWest
I hope to be the person my dog thinks I am.
10:37 PM on 02/15/2011
The article said it depends on need...maybe he was one of the sickest patients. Did you think about that?
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DRaymond
Network administrator, voiceovers
03:11 AM on 02/16/2011
Actually it says that Jobs got his liver in Tennessee, far away from his home in California.  Life is better if you have 24 hour access to a corporat jet that can take you and your surgeon anywhere in the country.
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alienator
the irony of the right is entertainment enough
07:09 AM on 02/16/2011
yea... you keep believing that if you want to.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zilo
Independent/Republicans hate freedom
10:21 PM on 02/15/2011
When the conservatives get their goal, organ transplants will be unheard of for most of the population. Only the rich will even have a fighting chance at life.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
09:52 PM on 02/15/2011
I assume it is good to be in states with lots of Republicans.  The guns must help, although the alcoholism does mitigate that.
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GirlOutWest
I hope to be the person my dog thinks I am.
10:38 PM on 02/15/2011
Love it.
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alongst
too often denied to speak
12:17 AM on 02/16/2011
How pathetic.
More like it's the conservatives that donate- the Libs don't care about anyone else, so now they want to ste al organs from the red states.
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GirlOutWest
I hope to be the person my dog thinks I am.
11:23 AM on 02/16/2011
Ridiculous and you know it. What a joke.
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CanuckistanCommie
I ain't no Commie but Pat Buchanan thinks so!!
09:45 PM on 02/15/2011
Yep and the righties scare the bejezus out of the public about horrors of universal healthcare.
The only thing that stops someone in Canada from getting a transplant is the availability of organs not dollars!!!!
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PDXTransplant
˙˙˙pןɹoʍ uʍop ǝpısdn uɐ uı ƃuıʌıן
09:44 PM on 02/15/2011
I don't understand why they don't do more 'live' donor transplants. My friend received more than half of his brother's healthy liver and he's doing great and even became an FBI agent. His brother's liver grew back to full size again and is doing great. This was done in CA.
01:03 PM on 02/17/2011
Not every person awaiting a transplant can receive a partial transplant. Besides, if people aren't willing to donate when they are dead, why would they volunteer to go under the knife to give part of their liver while they are still alive?
imayes
Mongo like candy!
09:39 PM on 02/15/2011
I looked at the map. Arizona has a skull and crossbones symbol. What does that mean?
01:04 PM on 02/17/2011
I know that there is not a pediatric transplant center there, maybe there are no transplant centers in AZ at all?