Litcius/Paper detail

Organ allocation in the age of the algorithm: avoiding futile transplantation – utility in allocation

François Faitot, Baptiste Michard, Thierry Artzner

2020Current Opinion in Organ Transplantation13 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This review describes and questions the evolution of allocation systems from local team decisions in the 20th century to patient-oriented allocation using complex algorithm predicting transplant benefit. RECENT FINDINGS: The opening years of the 2000s have seen the implementation of prioritization scores aiming at increasing transparency and reducing waitlist mortality. The 2010s have underlined the necessity of drawing the upper limits of how sick a patient can be while still ensuring acceptable survival. More complex algorithms evaluating transplant benefit have been implemented in allocation systems to take this issue into account. SUMMARY: Allocation algorithms are becoming more and more complex, integrating numerous parameters from both donor and recipient to achieve optimal matching. The limitations of implementing these complex algorithms are represented by the evermoving waiting list demography, geographic disparities between recipients and donors, team policy adaptation to rule changes, and implicit biases within the transplant community. Survival as the only metric by which to define benefit may be seen as restrictive; quality of life may be a fruitful measure for better defining benefit in organ transplantation in the future.

Topics & Concepts

Transparency (behavior)Matching (statistics)PrioritizationComputer scienceMetric (unit)Resource allocationTransplantationAdaptation (eye)Operations researchMedicineRisk analysis (engineering)Management scienceOperations managementPsychologyMathematicsEconomicsComputer securityNeuroscienceComputer networkSurgeryPathologyRenal Transplantation Outcomes and TreatmentsOrgan Donation and TransplantationOrgan Transplantation Techniques and Outcomes