Litcius/Paper detail

A Review of the Current State of Liver Transplantation Disparities

Nabeel Wahid, Russell Rosenblatt, Robert S. Brown

2020Liver Transplantation79 citationsDOI

Abstract

Equity in access is one of the core goals of the Organ Procurement and Transplant Network (OPTN). However, disparities in liver transplantation have been described since the passage of the National Organ Transplant Act, which established OPTN in the 1980s. During the past few decades, several efforts have been made by the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) to address disparities in liver transplantation with notable improvements in many areas. Nonetheless, disparities have persisted across insurance type, sex, race/ethnicity, geographic area, and age. African Americans have lower rates of referral to transplant centers, females have lower rates of transplantation from the liver waiting list than males, and public insurance is associated with worse posttransplant outcomes than private insurance. In addition, pediatric candidates and older adults have a disadvantage on the liver transplant waiting list, and there are widespread regional disparities in transplantation. Given the large degree of inequity in liver transplantation, there is a tremendous need for studies to propose and model policy changes that may make the liver transplant system more just and equitable.

Topics & Concepts

United Network for Organ SharingLiver transplantationMedicineDisadvantageEquity (law)TransplantationOrgan transplantationOrgan procurementEthnic groupReferralIntensive care medicineFamily medicineDemographyInternal medicinePolitical scienceLawSociologyOrgan Transplantation Techniques and OutcomesLiver Disease and TransplantationOrgan Donation and Transplantation
A Review of the Current State of Liver Transplantation Disparities | Litcius