Patterns of geographic variability in mortality and eligible deaths between organ procurement organizations

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Abstract

Eligible deaths are currently used as the denominator of the donor conversion ratio to mitigate the effect of varying mortality patterns in the populations served by different organ procurement organizations (OPOs). Eligible death is an OPO-reported metric rather than a product of formal epidemiological analysis, however, and may be confounded with OPO performance. Using Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, patterns of mortality and eligible deaths within each OPO were analyzed with the use of formal geostatistical analysis to determine whether eligible deaths truly reflect the geographic patterns they are intended to mitigate. There was a 2.1-fold difference in mortality between the OPOs with the highest and lowest rates, with significant positive spatial autocorrelation evident in mortality rates (Moran I =.110; P

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Cannon, R. M., Jones, C. M., Davis, E. G., Franklin, G. A., Gupta, M., & Shah, M. B. (2019). Patterns of geographic variability in mortality and eligible deaths between organ procurement organizations. American Journal of Transplantation, 19(10), 2756–2763. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajt.15390

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