• Journal of hepatology · Apr 2013

    Review

    Donor-recipient matching: myths and realities.

    • Javier Briceño, Ruben Ciria, and Manuel de la Mata.
    • Unit of Hepatobiliary Surgery and Liver Transplantation, CIBERehd, IMIBIC, University Hospital Reina Sofia, Cordoba, Spain. javibriceno@hotmail.com
    • J. Hepatol. 2013 Apr 1; 58 (4): 811-20.

    AbstractLiver transplant outcomes keep improving, with refinements of surgical technique, immunosuppression and post-transplant care. However, these excellent results and the limited number of organs available have led to an increasing number of potential recipients with end-stage liver disease worldwide. Deaths on waiting lists have led liver transplant teams maximize every organ offered and used in terms of pre and post-transplant benefit. Donor-recipient (D-R) matching could be defined as the technique to check D-R pairs adequately associated by the presence of the constituents of some patterns from donor and patient variables. D-R matching has been strongly analysed and policies in donor allocation have tried to maximize organ utilization whilst still protecting individual interests. However, D-R matching has been written through trial and error and the development of each new score has been followed by strong discrepancies and controversies. Current allocation systems are based on isolated or combined donor or recipient characteristics. This review intends to analyze current knowledge about D-R matching methods, focusing on three main categories: patient-based policies, donor-based policies and combined donor-recipient systems. All of them lay on three mainstays that support three different concepts of D-R matching: prioritarianism (favouring the worst-off), utilitarianism (maximising total benefit) and social benefit (cost-effectiveness). All of them, with their pros and cons, offer an exciting controversial topic to be discussed. All of them together define D-R matching today, turning into myth what we considered a reality in the past.Copyright © 2012 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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