National Kidney Foundation Applauds New Proposed Rules on Expanding Reimbursement for Living Donors, Quality Metrics for Organ Procurement Organizations, and Increasing Supply of Deceased Donor Kidneys

NEW YORK, Dec. 17, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- "Today the Administration announced two new proposed rules to address the critical organ supply crisis in America by expanding reimbursable expenses for living donors, establishing quality metrics for Organ Procurement Organizations (OPOs) and increasing the supply of transplantable deceased donor kidneys; and the National Kidney Foundation applauds these efforts to help the nearly 95,000 Americans waiting on a life-saving kidney transplant."

"One of the proposed rules announced today will expand financial assistance to living donors under the National Living Donor Assistance Center (NLDAC) to include reimbursing lost wages for donors who take time off from their jobs for donation and recovery and for childcare and eldercare expenses--all of which NKF has advocated for as outlined in A Path Forward for Increasing Kidney Transplantation. These changes will help ensure living donors are made financially whole after giving the gift of life; however, increasing the available pool of resources under NLDAC is critical to ensuring its success and to increasing the pool of living donors. NKF looks forward to working closely with the Administration and Congress to expand the financial resources available to living donors under the NLDAC program."

"Another proposed new rule will also put quality metrics in place for OPOs to help encourage the use of less than perfect deceased donor organs, which can still be viable options for patients on the waitlist. A deceased donor kidney transplant, even from a less than perfect kidney, may be better for a patient than remaining on the waitlist and undergoing years of dialysis."

"NKF's "Report of National Kidney Foundation Consensus Conference to Decrease Kidney Discards" published in October, 2018, provided the first systematic nationwide approach to reducing kidney discards. NKF has long advocated for reducing unnecessary kidney discards, improving transparency in the organ procurement process, and increasing overall transplant rates; and many of these recommendations are reflected in the Administration's proposed revisions to the Organ Procurement Organization (OPO) Conditions for Coverage (CfCs)."

"Our hope is that these new quality metrics will encourage OPOs to evaluate and procure organs from a larger pool of potential deceased donors, allows for patients to better understand and benchmark OPO performance, and ensure more organs are recovered and successfully transplanted."

The 14 specific recommendations published in the Report of National Kidney Foundation Consensus Conference to Decrease Kidney Discards are as follows:

    --  Strengthen local Organ Procurement Organization (OPO) and transplant
        center cooperative Quality Assurance and Performance Improvement (QAPI)
        efforts to reduce discard to identify the root causes of failure to
        place kidneys locally and implement solutions to increase allocation.
    --  Improve communication between OPO and Accepting Transplant Surgeon at
        time of organ placement to improve information used to make acceptance
        decisions.
    --  Routinely send prospective crossmatch to at least three transplant
        centers to speed up time to acceptance in case initial centers do not
        accept the kidney.
    --  Grant "local backup" to centers receiving exported kidneys to ensure
        shipped organs can be used at first destination.
    --  Identify "local backup" in local DSA for shared allocation of high
        Calculated Panel Reactive Antibodies (CPRA) or high KDPI kidneys to
        decrease the need for organ export.
    --  Expand use of virtual crossmatching to decrease the time to decision on
        acceptance by avoiding the need for testing of shipped specimen prior to
        transplant.
    --  Involve the nephrologist working cooperatively with the surgeon in
        decisions regarding organ acceptance to share responsibility and utilize
        the medical knowledge of the nephrologist in acceptance decisions that
        consider downstream risks of acceptance versus refusal of a given kidney
        for each specific patient.
    --  Improve practitioner and patient education on acceptance of higher risk
        for discard kidneys to prevent delays in acceptance and speed up
        decisions regarding kidney acceptance.
    --  Disseminate best practices from OPOs and transplant centers that
        routinely accept high risk organs to increase the number of centers
        which utilize high risk organs.
    --  Create expedited placement pathways to directly offer organs at risk of
        discard to small subset of centers that opt-in to accepting these
        organs. Center must sustain high rates of acceptance to receive offers.
    --  Identify organs that become a risk for discard during standard
        allocation and allocate them to patients in rescue centers that utilized
        high-risk organs when standard placement has been unsuccessful to place
        limit on time that the kidney is in standard allocation pathway to
        ensure it is transplanted.
    --  Standardize technical aspects of obtaining and interpreting renal
        (deceased donor) biopsies to utilize renal pathologists to improve
        decision making based on biopsy.
    --  Standardize provision of gross photos of procured kidneys and post on
        DonorNet to better inform the surgeon on condition of procured organ.
    --  Develop risk adjusted payment system to cover increased costs of
        high-risk kidneys to remove disincentive to accept the organ which may
        result in an increased risk of post-transplant morbidity with associated
        cost.

About Kidney Discards
There are many reasons why kidneys are discarded including poor organ quality, abnormal biopsy findings, prolonged cold ischemic time, anatomy, punitive regulatory and payer sanctions due to poor clinical outcomes, and the increased costs associated with the use of higher kidney donor profile index (KDPI) grafts, the report points out, yet experts believe and data supports that many of these kidneys can be used for transplant. Kidney discard rates also vary upon geography leading experts to believe that the variation may be based on a subjective view of organ viability by an individual transplant team. Every year kidneys that could be used for transplant are discarded. In 2016, more than 3,600 were deemed unfit for transplant and thrown away. But a panel of transplant experts convened by NKF agree that as many as 50% of those kidneys could be transplanted to prolong the lives of Americans otherwise treated with dialysis. The recommendations chronicled in the published report emerged from NKF's Consensus Conference to Reduce Kidney Discards, held in May 2017 with 75 multidisciplinary experts in the transplant field including kidney patients and families.

About Kidney Disease
In the United States, 37 million adults are estimated to have chronic kidney disease (CKD) - and most aren't aware of it. 1 in 3 American adults is at risk for CKD. Risk factors for kidney disease include diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, obesity, a family history of kidney failure, and being age 60 or older. People of African American, Hispanic, Native-American, Asian or Pacific Islander descent are at increased risk for developing the disease. African Americans are about 3 times more likely than Whites to develop end-stage kidney disease (ESKD or kidney failure). Compared to non-Hispanics, Hispanics are almost 1.3 times more likely to receive a diagnosis of kidney failure.

More than 726,000( )Americans have irreversible kidney failure, or end-stage renal disease (ESRD), and need dialysis or a kidney transplant to survive. More than 500,000 of these patients receive dialysis at least three times per week to replace kidney function. Approximately 95,000 Americans are on the waitlist for a kidney transplant right now. Depending on where a patient lives, the average wait time for a kidney transplant can be upwards of three to seven years. Living organ donation not only saves lives, it saves money. Each year, Medicare spends approximately $89,000 per dialysis patient and less than half, $35,000, for a transplant patient.

The National Kidney Foundation (NKF) is the largest, most comprehensive and longstanding organization dedicated to the awareness, prevention and treatment of kidney disease. For more information about NKF visit www.kidney.org.

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SOURCE National Kidney Foundation