Institute of Health and Social Care, London South Bank University and Birkbeck, University of London, London, UK.
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of London, Birkbeck, UK.
Xenotransplantation. 2024 May-Jun;31(3):e12860. doi: 10.1111/xen.12860.
Recent advances mean that formal clinical trials of solid organ xenotransplantation are increasingly likely to begin and patients requiring a kidney transplant could be the first participants. Healthcare workers and healthcare students constitute the current and future workforce that will influence public opinion of xenotransplantation. The attitudes of these populations are important to consider before recruitment for formal clinical trials begins.
This scoping review was reported according to the PRISMA extensions for scoping reviews checklist and the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology for scoping reviews. The Scopus, PubMed, and ScienceDirect databases were searched to identify articles that studied the attitudes of healthcare workers, healthcare students, or kidney patients toward xenotransplantation.
The search generated 816 articles, of which 27 met the eligibility criteria. The studies were conducted in 14 different countries on five different continents. Participants from the 27 studies totaled 29,836-this was constituted of 6,223 (21%) healthcare workers, 21,067 (71%) healthcare students, and 2,546 (8%) kidney patients. All three groups had an overall positive attitude toward xenotransplantation. However, in studies where participants were asked to consider xenotransplantation when the risks and results were not equal to allotransplantation-the overall attitude switched from positive to negative. The results also found that Spanish-speaking populations expressed more favorable views toward xenotransplantation compared to English-speaking populations.
The results of this review suggest that while attitudes of the three groups toward xenotransplantation are-on the face of it-positive, this positivity deteriorates when the risks and outcomes are framed in more clinically realistic terms. Only formal clinical trials can determine how the risks and outcomes of xenotransplantation compare to allotransplantation.
最近的进展意味着实体器官异种移植的正式临床试验越来越有可能开始,而需要进行肾脏移植的患者可能是第一批参与者。医疗工作者和医学生是当前和未来的劳动力,他们将影响公众对异种移植的看法。在正式临床试验开始招募之前,需要考虑这些人群的态度。
本范围综述按照 PRISMA 扩展清单和 Joanna Briggs 研究所范围综述方法进行报告。在 Scopus、PubMed 和 ScienceDirect 数据库中进行了检索,以确定研究医疗工作者、医学生或肾脏患者对异种移植态度的文章。
搜索生成了 816 篇文章,其中 27 篇符合入选标准。这些研究在 14 个不同的国家进行,涉及五个不同的洲。27 项研究的参与者总数为 29836 人,其中包括 6223 名(21%)医疗工作者、21067 名(71%)医学生和 2546 名(8%)肾脏患者。这三个群体对异种移植的总体态度是积极的。然而,在研究中当风险和结果与同种异体移植不相等时,让参与者考虑异种移植,整体态度从积极转变为消极。研究结果还发现,与英语国家相比,讲西班牙语的人群对异种移植的看法更为有利。
本综述的结果表明,虽然这三个群体对异种移植的态度在表面上是积极的,但当风险和结果以更符合临床实际的术语来描述时,这种积极态度就会恶化。只有正式的临床试验才能确定异种移植的风险和结果与同种异体移植相比如何。