The organ transplant ecology is complex, with sometimes perverse incentives in the interfaces among OPOs (Organ Procurement Organizations), donor hospitals, and transplant centers (not to mention dialysis clinics, nephrology practices, government agencies, and subcontractors like UNOS). Frank McCormick forwards the following compilation distributed by Greg Segal, mostly focused on recent criticisms (some more informed than others) of OPOs. (Having recently spent a day talking to OPO leaders, and not long before that to those running transplant centers, I'm aware that there are different opinions on the multiple causes of problems afflicting transplantation
Frank writes:
"Greg Segal (founder & CEO of Organize, which is attempting to reduce the U.S. organ donation shortage) sends along this excellent compilation of references for those who want to comment on two current proposals by agencies of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS):
Frank writes:
"Greg Segal (founder & CEO of Organize, which is attempting to reduce the U.S. organ donation shortage) sends along this excellent compilation of references for those who want to comment on two current proposals by agencies of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS):
a. Health Resources and
Services Administration (HRSA): “Removing Financial Disincentives to Living
Organ Donation” (deadline – 2/18/20)
b. Center for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS): “Revisions to the
Outcome Measure Requirements for Organ Procurement Organization” (deadline –
2/21/20)
- Although
95% of Americans support organ donation, objective research suggests that
organ procurement organizations (OPOs) only recover about 35% of potential
donors, leaving as many as 28,000 organs unrecovered every year.
- Because
the majority of patients on the organ waiting list are in need of kidneys,
OPO underperformance contributes to a $35 billion annual expense to Medicare.
- As Senators from the Finance Committee wrote in a February 10th 2019 oversight
letter: “Because OPOs operate as regional monopolies, rigorous oversight
is critical to ensure that all 58 OPOs are faithfully executing their
mission of organ recovery.”
- As Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar said: “We’re
going to stop looking the other way while lives are lost and hold OPOs
accountable."
- With almost 115,000 patients waiting for a lifesaving organ
transplant, it is imperative that CMS implements the proposed metrics as
strongly and quickly as possible, especially since the majority of
OPOs (37 of 58) are failing one or both key metrics.
Context on why OPO reform is critical to helping more patients
access organ transplants
- Every
day, 33 Americans die or are removed from the
organ waiting list because a transplant is unavailable. Additionally,
because there is such a large gap between supply and demand, many
Americans in need of transplant never even reach the waiting list.
Research indicates that the true death toll may be as high as 118
Americans per day just from the kidney shortage alone.
- The
shortage of deceased donor organs results in part from inefficiency from
federal monopoly contractors, called organ procurement organizations (OPOs),
which too often fail to recover organs for transplant. (See NYT
whistleblower video.)
- Research
cited by the Trump Administration shows that a more efficient organ donation
system could recover up to 28,000
more organs for transplant each year.
- This includes 17,000 kidneys; almost 8,000 livers;
1,500 hearts; and 1,500 lungs.
- Because of costs to Medicare, OPO reform
could also save up to $12 billion over 5 years in avoided dialysis costs.
- A
key problem is OPOs are allowed to self-interpret and self-report their own performance, leading to a lack of
transparency and accountability. As a result, no OPO has lost a government
contract in decades.
- In fact, reporting suggests the current standards are unenforceable.
- The
New York Times Editorial Board highlighted “an astounding lack of accountability and
oversight in the nation’s creaking, monopolistic organ transplant system
is allowing hundreds of thousands of potential organ donations to fall
through the cracks.”
- HHS/CMS’s
proposed rule, published on December 17th, moves to objective data from the Centers
for Disease Control, and shows the majority of the nation’s 58 OPOs are failing
proposed performance metrics.
- CMS estimates that just bringing OPOs up
to minimum compliance standards would mean 5,000 more deceased donor
transplants every year.
- Responses to the proposed rule are due by February
21st at 5pm ET.
Additional Resources
- Day One Project paper co-authored by Donna Cryer (President & CEO
of Global Liver Institute), Jennifer Erickson (former Obama staffer),
Crystal Gadegbeku (Council member, American Society of Nephrology and
Section Chief of Nephrology, Temple University), Greg Segal (founder &
CEO of Organize), and Abe Sutton (former Trump staffer)
- Senate Finance Committee oversight letter to Inspector General inquiring about
OPO underperformance, fraud, waste and abuse, and conflicts of interest
- Senate Finance Committee oversight letter to UNOS inquiring about abdication of
oversight responsibilities over OPOs
- Representative Katie Porter oversight letter regarding OPOs, specifically the
LA-based OPO known as One Legacy
- Senators Elizabeth Warren and Richard
Blumenthal oversight
letter to CMS regarding OPO performance and evaluation metrics
- Patient groups writing to Administrator Verma calling for OPO
accountability: American Association of Kidney Patients, American Society
of Nephrology, Cholangiocarcinoma Foundation, Fatty Liver Foundation,
Global Liver Institute, Liver Education Advocacy and Prevention Services,
Renal Physicians Association
- Politico Pulse Podcast interview with Greg Segal about the need for OPO
reform
News
- Washington Post on Senate Finance Committee OPO oversight letter
- Associated Press on HHS proposed OPO rule
- Politico Pulse on HHS proposed OPO rule
- Full Frontal with Samantha Bee on OPOs never losing contracts
- Kaiser Health News about UNOS and OPOs losing organs in
transit
Op eds
- USA Today: Andy Slavitt and Adam Brandon, “Here's how organ
donation reform could save thousands of lives, billions in tax dollars”
- The Hill: Jennifer Erickson & Abe Sutton, “It’s Time to
Provide Needed Reform to the Organ Donation System”
- New York Post: Dara Kass, “America’s Deadly Failure on Organ
Donations”
- CNN: Bakari Sellers, “Dealing with a broken organ donation
system after my 4 month old had liver failure”
- STAT: Laura and John Arnold, “A simple bureaucratic organ
donation fix will save thousands of lives”
- Washington Post: “The Trump administration is actually doing something
great on health care”
- Washington Post: Erika Zak, 39-year old mother who died during
transplant, “A posthumous letter to my daughter”