Publication | Open Access
National landscape of HIV+ to HIV+ kidney and liver transplantation in the United States
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Citations
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2019
Year
Organ DonationSolid Organ TransplantationTransplantation MedicineUnited StatesHope ActTransplantation NetworkTranslational MedicineOrgan ProcurementPublic HealthNational LandscapeTransplantation SurgeryTransplantationHiv+ KidneyKidney TransplantOutcomes ResearchOrgan AllocationBlood TransplantationHivLiver TransplantationTransplant ImmunologyKidney TransplantationTransplant SurgeryMedicine
The HIV Organ Policy Equity (HOPE) Act, enacted on November 21, 2013, enables research on the transplantation of organs from donors infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) (HIV+) into HIV+ individuals who, prior to transplantation, are infected with HIV. In 2015, the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network revised organ allocation policies on November 21, and on November 23, the Secretary of Health and Human Services published research criteria and revised the Final Rule accordingly. The HOPE Act appears to be underutilized to date. As of December 31, 2018, there were 56 donors recovered (50 donors transplanted) resulting in 102 organs transplanted (31 liver, 71 kidney). As of December 31, 2018, 212 registrations were indicated on the waiting list as willing to accept an HIV+ kidney or liver, most of which were waiting in active status. Due to the limited number of transplants performed to date, definitive safety conclusions cannot be reached at this time, though current data suggest that 1-year patient and graft survival does not deviate in a major way from that observed in HIV+ recipients of non-HIV+ organs or non-HIV+ recipients. As safety data are reviewed and disseminated, it is anticipated that HOPE participation will increase should safety signals remain low.
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