| Literature DB >> 35368648 |
Rebecca L Thom1, Anne Dalle-Ave2, Eline M Bunnik3, Tanja Krones4,5, Kristof Van Assche6, Alex Ruck Keene7,8, Antonia J Cronin9.
Abstract
Inequitable access to deceased donor organs for transplantation has received considerable scrutiny in recent years. Emerging evidence suggests patients with impaired decision-making capacity (IDC) face inequitable access to transplantation. The "Ethical and Legal Issues" working group of the European Society of Transplantation undertook an expert consensus process. Literature relating to transplantation in patients with IDC was examined and collated to investigate whether IDC is associated with inferior transplant outcomes and the legitimacy of this healthcare inequality was examined. Even though the available evidence of inferior transplant outcomes in these patients is limited, the working group concluded that access to transplantation in patients with IDC may be inequitable. Consequently, we argue that IDC should not in and of itself be considered as a barrier to either registration on the transplant waiting list or allocation of an organ. Strategies for non-discrimination should focus on ensuring eligibility is based upon sound evidence and outcomes without reference to non-medical criteria. Recommendations to support policy makers and healthcare providers to reduce unintended inequity and inadvertent discrimination are set out. We call upon transplant centres and national bodies to include data on decision-making capacity in routine reporting schedules in order to improve the evidence base upon which organ policy decisions are made going forward.Entities:
Keywords: capacity; equitable access; ethics; law and policy; transplantation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35368648 PMCID: PMC8971203 DOI: 10.3389/ti.2022.10084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transpl Int ISSN: 0934-0874 Impact factor: 3.782
Summary of empirical evidence relating key transplant outcome measures to each group with potentially impaired decision making capacity.
| Group with potentially impaired DECISION-MAKING capacity | Key transplant outcome measures | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adherence with medical therapy | Graft outcome | Patient outcome | Quality of life | |
| Intellectual disability | Cohort studies suggesting adherence is comparable. OCEBM | Multiple cohort studies suggesting graft outcomes are comparable. OCEBM level 3 ( | Multiple cohort studies suggesting non-graft outcomes are comparable. OCEBM level 3 ( | Evidence is that in general quality of life is improved by transplantation ( |
| OCEBM level 1 | ||||
| Small number of cohort studies showing QOL benefit in this group. OCEBM level 3 ( | ||||
| Severe mental health conditions | Evidence of increased non-adherence in those with depression ( | Evidence of poorer outcomes in those with depression ( | Evidence of poorer outcomes in those with depression ( | Evidence is that in general quality of life is improved by transplantation ( |
| Otherwise conflicting evidence from cohort studies of other psychological conditions OCEBM Level 3 ( | OCEBM level 1 | |||
| Cognitive impairment | Evidence from cohort studies of reduced adherence in older age groups of transplant recipients | Cohort studies indicate worse outcomes ( | Cohort studies indicate worse outcomes ( | Cohort study evidence that QoL benefit is consistent in over 65s (those most at risk of cognitive impairment on dialysis)( |
| OCEBM level 3 ( | OCEBM level 3 | OCEBM level 3 | OCEBM level 3 | |
| Permanent disorders of consciousness | No concern as adherence would be assured by caregiver | No evidence available | No evidence available | Theoretical reason to believe QoL outcomes would be significantly different from the general population of transplant recipients |
Oxford Centre for Evidence Based Medicine 2011 levels of evidence are included to indicate the degree of certainty with which the authors make these assertions.
This table has drawn on evidence relating to intellectual disability from the paediatric literature. However in this paper we do not consider children as a discrete category, as they are treated differently where they are considered too young to have the legal capacity to make the relevant decisions, whether or not they have any intellectual disability or mental disorder.