| Literature DB >> 24219177 |
Céline Durand, Andrée Duplantie, Yves Chabot, Hubert Doucet, Marie-Chantal Fortin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In their book Spare Parts, published in 1992, Fox and Swazey criticized various aspects of organ transplantation, including the routinization of the procedure, ignorance regarding its inherent uncertainties, and the ethos of transplant professionals. Using this work as a frame of reference, we analyzed articles on organ transplantation published in internal medicine and transplantation journals between 1995 and 2008 to see whether Fox and Swazey's critiques of organ transplantation were still relevant.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24219177 PMCID: PMC3849931 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6939-14-39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Solid organ transplantation is the main topic (kidney, liver, heart, pancreas, lung) | Letters to the editor |
| Images in clinical medicine | |
| Articles about: | |
| • organ donation; | |
| • surgical procedures; | |
| • mechanical heart devices; | |
| • stem cell, bone marrow, composite tissue and pancreatic islet transplants; | |
| • xenotransplantation. |
Figure 1Article distribution.
Article characteristics
| | | P < 0.001 | |
| Kidney | 105 (30.1) | 148 (42.4) | |
| Liver | 72 (20.6) | 87 (24.9) | |
| Heart | 58 (16.6) | 25 (7.2) | |
| Lung | 26 (7.4) | 14 (4.0) | |
| Pancreas | 5 (1.4) | 3 (0.9) | |
| Multi-organ | 37 (10.6) | 43 (12.3) | |
| Not mentioned | 46 (13.2) | 29 (8.3) | |
| | | P = 0.3292 | |
| Americas | 181 (51.8) | 167 (47.9) | |
| Europe | 135 (38.7) | 154 (44.1) | |
| Other | 33 (9.5) | 28 (8.0) | |
| | | P < 0.001 | |
| Research, clinical trial | 111 (31.8) | 221 (63.3) | |
| Brief communication | 110 (31.5) | 69 (19.8) | |
| Review | 46 (13.2) | 23 (6.6) | |
| Editorial | 41 (11.7) | 3 (0.9) | |
| Case report | 21 (6.0) | 31 (8.9) | |
| Correspondence | 17 (4.8) | 2 (0.6) | |
| Other (patient’s testimony and guidelines) | 3 (0.9) | 0 (0) |
Ethical issues
| "Organs from donors with specified known infections may be considered for specific recipients—provided there is appropriate informed consent—based on the urgency of the need for transplantation and the availability of effective antimicrobial therapies" [ | |
| "Consent is an important issue and it is clearly in the doctor’s interest to make sure that it is based on complete and explicit discussion of known risks" [ | |
| "Hannah Jones persuaded Herefordshire Primary Care Trust that she was competent to make her own decisions about medical treatment and was making an informed choice not to have the operation that could have prolonged her life" [ | |
| "A clear and comprehensive informed consent process is necessary, including a thorough and easily understood informed consent document. To control for conflicts of interest, informed consent should be obtained by independent third parties and should include counselling on all aspects of the risks and benefits of the experimental study" [ | |
| "Paying for a kidney donation is viewed as a potential win-win situation that can benefit both parties. Individual decision making and patient autonomy have become the final arbiters of medical and bioethical values" [ | |
| "Physicians should discuss the risks and benefits of the various immunosuppressive regimens with respect to pregnancy and the fetus with their female patients and make decisions collaboratively" [ | |
| "Adequate graft function requires lifelong immunosuppressive treatment, and the resultant modification of the immune system is associated with an increased risk of various cancers, particularly those involving viruses" [ | |
| "In cases in which the need for transplantation is relatively less urgent, it is reasonable to avoid the use of organs from donors with unexplained fever, rash, encephalitis, or untreated infectious syndromes" [ | |
| "This knowledge raised the intriguing possibility that the immunosuppression used to prevent rejection might be beneficial for patients with HIV disease that had been successfully controlled by antiretroviral agents" [ | |
| "It is a relevant difference. You want to make sure you get the appropriate use of the appropriate resources. That is ethically not questionable at all. We do this rationalization of resources in health care every day" [ | |
| "Because transplantable organs are scarce, determining the most ethical allocation system requires simultaneous considerations of efficacy, urgency, and equity" [ | |
| "As stewards of a precious resource, the transplant community has a goal of achieving an equitable, transparent, and efficient system of organ allocation" [ | |
| "We believe that the United States should end policies that permit geographic inequities and move quickly to determine the best use of data on the efficacy of outcomes to create a more equitable national system of distribution" [ | |
| "The federal government should expect dialysis programs to meet reasonable standards for equitable access to transplantation for all patients, regardless of race, sex, or social status" [ | |
| "Even though the issue of personal responsibility for organ failure is usually raised in the literature with regard to whether patients who abuse alcohol should be given a lower priority for an organ, a similar argument could be made that a woman who wittingly chooses to get pregnant when her graft is unstable (and who therefore has an increased risk of graft loss) should be given a lower priority for retransplantation" [ | |
| "A British liver transplant specialist last week accused colleagues of taking a decision on moral rather than medical grounds when they refused a transplant to a teenage girl with liver failure after she took half an ecstasy tablet" [ | |
Patients’ experiences
| "We jumped to answer each phone call, and our pager became the beeper of hope" [ | |
| "Physically I was amazed at how well I held out. I felt really strong. My heart seemed to respond so well" [ | |
| "With an organ transplantation, there is often a rebirth—a renewed awareness of the quality of life . . . It is not uncommon to see people pursue some dream which was put on a backburner because they were too busy or it was considered out of reach" [ | |
| "At one point during the year and a half, I experienced a deep depression, thinking 'Why me’" [ | |
| "Not surprisingly, this can lead to anguish and acts of desperation for those who wait" [ | |
| "Among the psychological variables it is above all anxiety, anger/hostility, and denial that may cause compliance problems. High level of anxiety was reported to be consistently the most important predictor" [ | |
| "Most patients will not divulge nonadherence, not only because of shame and embarrassment, but also because admitting to nonadherence may make them less desirable candidates for retransplantation" [ | |
| "The past year has been painful and unforgettable. Our faith in God has been our greatest resource: we discovered strength in weakness, hope in despair, wholeness in brokenness and life in potential death" [ |
Certainty and uncertainty
| "The immediate implications of the data on ABO-incompatible heart transplantation in infants are uncertain" [ | |
| "Information regarding their prognosis (i.e., predicted survival without transplant and recommendations for timing of listing are starting to emerge, although considerable uncertainty remains" [ | |
| "Some patients may prefer early resolution of uncertainty to delay, especially if knowing the outcome of the allocation process changes their time horizon with respect to financial decisions" [ | |
| "There are a number of ways to approach diagnosis of the noncompliance syndrome, but the only certainty comes from direct patient admission of nonadherence to the prescribed immunosuppression" [ | |
| "Therefore, whereas 20 years ago death was a near certainty without a transplant, and any length of survival after heart transplantation was regarded as a bonus, in the present era some patients potentially have a similar prognosis with alternative treatments" [ |