Vanderbilt Transplant Center, Section of Surgical Sciences, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
University of Alabama School of Law, Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
Am J Transplant. 2019 Apr;19(4):1212-1217. doi: 10.1111/ajt.15227. Epub 2019 Jan 22.
Allocation of scarce livers for transplantation seeks to balance competing ethical principles of autonomy, utility, and justice. Given the history and ongoing dependence of transplantation on public support for funding and organs, understanding and incorporating public attitudes into allocation decisions seems appropriate. In the context of the current controversy around liver allocation, we sought to determine public preferences about issues relevant to the debate. We performed multiple surveys of attitudes around donation and evaluated these using conjoint analysis and clarifying follow-up questions. We found little public support that allocation decisions should be based solely on risk of waiting-list mortality. Strong public sentiment supported maximizing outcomes after transplantation, prioritizing US citizens or residents, keeping organs local, and considering cost in allocation decisions. We then present a methodology for incorporating these preferences into the Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (or MELD) priority score. Taken together, these findings suggest that current allocation schemes do not accurately reflect public preferences and suggest a framework to better align allocation with the values of the public.
分配稀缺的肝脏用于移植,旨在平衡自主、效用和公正这几个相互竞争的伦理原则。鉴于移植的历史和对公共资金和器官支持的持续依赖,了解并将公众态度纳入分配决策似乎是合适的。在当前围绕肝脏分配的争议背景下,我们试图确定公众对与辩论相关的问题的偏好。我们对捐赠问题进行了多次态度调查,并使用联合分析和澄清后续问题来评估这些调查。我们发现,公众几乎没有支持仅根据等待名单死亡率来做出分配决策。公众强烈支持在移植后实现最大化的结果,优先考虑美国公民或居民,保留本地器官,并在分配决策中考虑成本。然后,我们提出了一种将这些偏好纳入终末期肝病模型(MELD)优先级评分的方法。综上所述,这些发现表明,目前的分配方案并没有准确反映公众的偏好,并为更好地使分配与公众的价值观保持一致提供了一个框架。