Othman Marwan H, Dutta Anirban, Kondziella Daniel
Departments of Neurology, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, NY, United States.
J Neurol Sci. 2020 Jun 15;413:116800. doi: 10.1016/j.jns.2020.116800. Epub 2020 Mar 30.
It is poorly understood how public perception of the difference between brain death and circulatory death may influence attitudes towards organ donation. We investigated the public opinion on brain death versus circulatory death and documented inconsistencies in the legislations of countries with different cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds.
Using a crowdsourcing approach, we randomized 1072 participants from 30 countries to a case report of organ donation after brain death or to one following circulatory death. Further, we sampled guidelines from 24 countries and 5 continents.
Of all participants, 73% stated they would be willing to donate all organs, while 16% would want to donate some of their organs. To increase the rate of donations, 47% would agree with organ donation without family consent as the default. Exposure to "brain death" was not associated with a lesser likelihood of participants agreeing with organ donation (82.1%) compared to "circulatory death" (81.9%; relative risk 1.02, 95% CI 0.99 to 1.03; p = .11). However, participants exposed to "circulatory death" were more certain that the patient was truly dead (87.9% ± 19.7%) than participants exposed to "brain death" (84.1% ± 22.7%; Cohen's d 0.18; p = 0:004). Sampling of guidelines revealed large differences between countries regarding procedures required to confirm brain death and circulatory death, respectively.
Implementation of organ donation after circulatory death is unlikely to negatively influence the willingness to donate organs, but legislation is still brain death-based in most countries. The time seems ripe to increase the rate of circulatory death-based organ donation.
公众对脑死亡和循环死亡差异的认知如何影响器官捐赠态度,目前尚不清楚。我们调查了公众对脑死亡与循环死亡的看法,并记录了不同文化和社会经济背景国家在立法上的不一致之处。
采用众包方法,我们将来自30个国家的1072名参与者随机分为两组,分别阅读脑死亡后器官捐赠的病例报告或循环死亡后器官捐赠的病例报告。此外,我们还从五大洲的24个国家收集了相关指南。
在所有参与者中,73%表示愿意捐赠所有器官,16%表示愿意捐赠部分器官。为了提高捐赠率,47%的人会默认同意在未经家属同意的情况下进行器官捐赠。与“循环死亡”(81.9%)相比,接触“脑死亡”的参与者同意器官捐赠的可能性并没有降低(82.1%;相对风险1.02,95%置信区间0.99至1.03;p = 0.11)。然而,接触“循环死亡”的参与者比接触“脑死亡”的参与者更确定患者真的死亡(87.9%±19.7% vs 84.1%±22.7%;科恩d值0.18;p = 0.004)。指南抽样显示,各国在确认脑死亡和循环死亡所需程序方面存在很大差异。
循环死亡后器官捐赠的实施不太可能对器官捐赠意愿产生负面影响,但大多数国家的立法仍以脑死亡为基础。提高基于循环死亡的器官捐赠率的时机似乎已经成熟。