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The first and older one is known as "aspiration" and requires the donor to endure painful and risky procedures that require hospitalization and anesthesia. Long, thick needles are inserted into the cavities of the donor's hip bones to suck out the bone marrow. The court said that process was still covered by the National Organ Transplant Act, which explicitly prohibits paying donors for their bone marrow.
"The point of the ban on selling organs is to protect people from ignoring the medical risk for money," said Arthur Caplan, a bioethicist with the University of Pennsylvania. Caplan said the ruling Thursday may unintentionally support campaigns to pay donors in other medical fields such as compensating women for their eggs.
The newer procedure, which the court ruled exempt from the act, was developed about 20 years ago and involves harvesting cells from the bloodstream rather than in bone. Called "apheresis," the procedure requires the donor to undergo five days of drug injections to stimulate production of specialized blood cells. Then the donor sits in a recliner for several hours while the blood is filtered through a machine that extracts the specialized cells.
"Congress could not have had an intent to address the apheresis method when it passed the statute, because the method did not exist at that time," Judge Andrew Kleinfeld wrote for the court. "We construe 'bone marrow' to mean the soft, fatty substance in bone cavities, as opposed to blood, which means the red liquid that flows through the blood vessels."
Kleinfeld said it may be time to apply a new label to the process.
"It may be that 'bone marrow transplant' is an anachronism that will soon fade away, as peripheral blood stem cell apheresis replaces aspiration as the transplant technique, much as 'dial the phone' is fading away now that telephones do not have dials," Kleinfeld wrote.
The decision won't become official for at least 30 days while the U.S. Department of Justice ponders what to do next. The DOJ can ask the appeals court to reconsider the decision or petition the U.S. Supreme Court to take it.
DOJ spokesman Charles Miller said the department is reviewing its options.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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