Rosales Brenda Maria, Shah Karan, De La Mata Nicole, Baldwin Heather, Hedley James, Clayton Philip, Wyld Melanie, Kelly Patrick, Wyburn Kate, Morton Rachael, Webster Angela
Sydney School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Camperdown, Australia.
NHMRC Clinical Trials Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2025 Jul 29;14:e67588. doi: 10.2196/67588.
Increasing deceased organ donation is a worldwide priority constrained by concerns of inadvertent transmission of cancer or infectious diseases from deceased organ donors. Up to 60% of potential donors referred for consideration for deceased organ donation in Australia do not proceed due to biovigilance concerns.
We aim to describe the impact of accepting or declining potential donors foregone for biovigilance concerns on patient and transplant outcomes.
The MODUS (Maximizing Organ Donor Utility Systemwide) study will use data for patients ever waitlisted for kidney transplantation and all potential donors referred for consideration for deceased organ donation. First, we will use binational data from the Australian and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry 2010-2020 to describe and evaluate factors impacting the current patient journey on the kidney transplant waitlist, including episodes of suspension and reactivation, time waiting, and whether transplanted. Second, we will quantify the time from offer decline to deceased donor transplantation and the impact of the intersectional disadvantage on the waiting time after decline for patients on the waitlist using flexible parametric survival models. Third, the MODUS study will use an established dataset of outcome data for all candidates for deceased organ donors referred to the New South Wales (NSW) Organ and Tissue Donation Service (OTDS) in 2010-2020 to describe donor referral risk profiles and determine any potential donor gains that could be made through better access to donor information at the time of decision-making, more accurate estimation of the absolute biovigilance risk, and varying of the acceptable biovigilance risk thresholds for accepting donors. Lastly, we will use the estimates derived from the first 3 aims as inputs for health economic models, where, using cohort- and individual patient-level simulations, we will quantify the impact of varying donor referral decisions on health care costs, quality-adjusted survival, the time on the waitlist, and the time to a kidney transplant.
Linked health data were received in 2023. Data analysis is ongoing, and results will be disseminated at scientific conferences, published in the scientific media, and published via collaborator networks in 2025.
The MODUS study will provide evidence of the individual-level and health service effects of increasing acceptance of deceased donor kidneys that would otherwise be declined due to biovigilance concerns. Specifically, we expect to report our findings on improvements in overall patient survival and quality of life by increasing the number of waitlisted people transplanted from donors with an acceptable biovigilance risk who are currently foregone. We will also report on the cost-effectiveness of a potential "informed biovigilance strategy" versus current practice. In doing so, we will develop evidence to support policy and complex clinical decisions in Australia's organ donor referral process with potential worldwide application.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/67588.
增加已故器官捐赠是一项全球优先事项,但受到对已故器官捐赠者癌症或传染病意外传播的担忧的限制。在澳大利亚,高达60%被转介考虑进行已故器官捐赠的潜在捐赠者因生物警戒问题而未继续进行捐赠。
我们旨在描述因生物警戒问题而被放弃的潜在捐赠者被接受或拒绝对患者和移植结果的影响。
MODUS(全系统最大化器官捐赠效用系统)研究将使用曾在肾移植等待名单上的患者以及所有被转介考虑进行已故器官捐赠的潜在捐赠者的数据。首先,我们将使用2010 - 2020年澳大利亚和新西兰透析与移植登记处的双边数据来描述和评估影响当前肾移植等待名单上患者进程的因素,包括暂停和重新激活的情况、等待时间以及是否接受移植。其次,我们将使用灵活的参数生存模型量化从拒绝捐赠提议到已故捐赠者移植的时间,以及交叉劣势对等待名单上患者拒绝捐赠后等待时间的影响。第三,MODUS研究将使用2010 - 2020年转介给新南威尔士州(NSW)器官和组织捐赠服务处(OTDS)的所有已故器官捐赠候选者的既定结果数据集,以描述捐赠者转介风险概况,并确定通过在决策时更好地获取捐赠者信息、更准确地估计绝对生物警戒风险以及改变接受捐赠者的可接受生物警戒风险阈值可能获得的任何潜在捐赠者收益。最后,我们将把从前三个目标得出的估计值作为卫生经济模型的输入,在该模型中,通过队列和个体患者层面的模拟,我们将量化不同捐赠者转介决策对医疗成本、质量调整生存、等待名单上的时间以及肾移植时间的影响。
2023年收到了关联的健康数据。数据分析正在进行中,结果将于2025年在科学会议上公布、在科学媒体上发表,并通过合作网络发布。
MODUS研究将提供证据,证明增加对因生物警戒问题原本会被拒绝的已故捐赠者肾脏的接受度对个体层面和卫生服务产生的影响。具体而言,我们预计将报告我们的研究结果,即通过增加从目前被放弃但具有可接受生物警戒风险的捐赠者处接受移植的等待名单上的人数,来改善总体患者生存和生活质量。我们还将报告潜在的“知情生物警戒策略”与当前做法相比的成本效益。通过这样做,我们将为支持澳大利亚器官捐赠转介过程中的政策和复杂临床决策提供证据,这些决策可能具有全球应用价值。
国际注册报告标识符(IRRID):DERRl-10.2196/67588