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The UNOS project aims to spur more of them. Any of the 77 transplant centers participating so far merely submits key matching information about a patient and his or her would-be donor to UNOS' database, which periodically alerts centers to potential matches with people from other parts of the country.
The first attempt late last month -- when the database contained just 43 kidney patients and 45 donors -- turned up seven potentially matching pairs, says Dr. Kenneth Andreoni of Ohio State University, UNOS' kidney committee chairman. The rest is up to the home hospitals of the patients and donors, who ship each other blood samples necessary for final compatibility testing and then set up the operations.
Transplant specialists are divided on whether the UNOS approach will prove best, or whether regional alliances or developing "centers of excellence" for kidney swaps might be more effective. In San Antonio, Bingaman notes that a third of his hospital's 180 live-donor kidney transplants this year were part of exchanges. That's a big increase from 71 live-donor transplants in 2007, before he began swaps.
That debate aside, people can stay on their home hospital's transplant list and be part of the pilot national database, potentially increasing their chances of finding of a match, says Hopkins' Segev.
And regardless of how it's done, increasing kidney swaps potentially helps everyone -- by removing people from the national waiting list.
"You added new kidneys to the system," says Georgetown's Melancon, whose hospital is transplanting about 30 percent of the people on its waiting list, nearly double the rate before he began exchanges. He's now starting to comb old records to find patients whose incompatible donors were turned away years ago, to see if their donors are willing to give it another try.
[Associated
Press;
Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press in Washington.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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