With the advent of direct-acting antiviral agents, there has been a rapid rise in hepatitis C virus–infected (HCV+) heart transplantation. We aimed to understand local and regional differences in utilization and allocation of HCV+ hearts. Using United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) de-identified data from January 1, 2016 to September 30, 2019 we compared trends in the utilization rates (hearts transplanted/donors recovered) of HCV-uninfected (HCV−) to those of HCV+ nonviremic (HCV-NV) and viremic (HCV-V) hearts nationally and by UNOS region. We also evaluated allocation rates (hearts successfully allocated/donors recovered) by organ procurement organization (OPO). We found that (1) in 2019, national utilization rates for HCV-NV and HCV-V hearts were the same as HCV− hearts (27.6% for HCV-NV, 30.9 for HCV-V, and 31.7% for HCV−, P =.277); (2) utilization rates of HCV-NV hearts were low in regions 3 and 4 and of HCV-V hearts in regions 3, 4, and 8 even in the contemporary period since 2018; and (3) there was marked variability in allocation of HCV+ hearts at the OPO level even within the same UNOS region. We conclude that despite national strides in the utilization of HCV+ hearts for transplantation, more aggressive allocation of HCV+ hearts at the OPO level may still significantly affect the organ shortage.
CITATION STYLE
Prakash, K., Wainana, C., Trageser, J., Hahn, A., Lay, C., Pretorius, V., … Aslam, S. (2020). Local and regional variability in utilization and allocation of hepatitis C virus–infected hearts for transplantation. American Journal of Transplantation, 20(10), 2867–2875. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajt.15857
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