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Kidney Exchange

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Each human being has 2 kidneys and healthy individuals can live with just one kidney. ... in Toledo, whose mom La. gave to Ce. in Columbus whose daughter Li. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Kidney Exchange


1
Kidney Exchange
  • Based on Al Roths notes for
  • ASSA, January 2008

2
Kidneys as commodities
  • There are over 70,000 patients on the waiting
    list for cadaver kidneys in the U.S.
  • Each human being has 2 kidneys and healthy
    individuals can live with just one kidney.
  • How much are you willing to receive for one of
    your kidneys?
  • There is a potential market herebut
  • Section 301 of the National Organ Transplant Act
    (NOTA), 42 U.S.C. 274e 1984 states
  • it shall be unlawful for any person to knowingly
    acquire, receive or otherwise transfer any human
    organ for valuable consideration for use in human
    transplantation.

3
Kidney exchange
  • Who can give a kidney?
  • Two genetic characteristics play key roles
  • Blood type and 2) Tissue type or HLA type
  • This is a matching market (like houses,
    roommates, partners, employees, etc.) but
  • Money is not allowed!!!!

4
Compatibility I
  • Type O kidneys can be transplanted into any
    patient
  • Type A (B) kidneys can be transplanted into type
    A (B) or type AB patients
  • Type AB kidneys can only be transplanted into
    type AB patients.
  • Type O patients are at a disadvantage in finding
    compatible kidneys.
  • And type O donors will be in short supply.

5
Compatibility II
  • Tissue type or HLA type
  • Combination of six proteins, two of type A, two
    of type B, and two of type DR.
  • Prior to transplantation, the potential recipient
    is tested for the presence of antibodies against
    HLA in the donor kidney
  • The presence of antibodies, known as a positive
    crossmatch, significantly increases the
    likelihood of graft rejection by the recipient
    and makes the transplant infeasible.

6
Kidney exchange--background
  • In 2006 there were 10,659 transplants of cadaver
    kidneys performed in the U.S.
  • In the same year, 3,875 patients died while on
    the waiting list (and more than 1,000 others were
    removed from the list as Too Sick to
    Transplant.
  • In 2006 there were also 6,428 transplants of
    kidneys from living donors in the US.
  • Families and Friends but
  • Sometimes donors are incompatible with their
    intended recipient.
  • This opens the possibility of exchange by
    matching another pair with and incompatible
    donorbut

7
Incentives and congestion
  • For incentives and other reasons, such exchanges
    have been done simultaneously.
  • That means two surgeries happening at the same
    time.
  • Usually also in the same hospital
  • Why stopping at only two simultaneous surgeries?
  • Logistically is very difficult to perform more
    than two at the same time
  • Is there a big gain in doing more than two?

8
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9
Incompatible patient-donor pairs
  • Long side of the market
  • Pairs (patient-donor) that are hard to match
    looking for a harder to find kidney than they are
    offering
  • O-A, O-B, O-AB, A-AB, and B-AB
  • Short side of the market
  • Pairs (patient- donor) that are easy to match
    offering a kidney in more demand than the one
    they need
  • A-O, B-O, AB-O, AB-A, AB-B
  • All of these would be different if we werent
    confining our attention to incompatible pairs.
  • Increase the number of potential exchanges
    but...how much?

10
Why Game Theory helped?
  • Rank pairs according to priority matching
    Reflecting time and difficult compatibility
  • Any priority matching mechanism makes it a
    dominant strategy for all patient-donor pairs to
  • accept all feasible kidneys
  • reveal all available donors
  • With chains of three pairs we can achieve almost
    perfect efficiency
  • Theorem every efficient matching of
    patient-donor pairs in a large market can be
    carried out in exchanges of no more than 4 pairs.
  • only 4 blood types and
  • AB is very rare

11
Creating a Thick (and efficiently organized)
Market Without Money
  • New England Program for Kidney Exchangeapproved
    in 2004, started 2005.
  • Organizes kidney exchanges among the 14
    transplant centers in New England
  • Ohio Paired Kidney Donation Consortium, Alliance
    for Paired Donation (Rees)
  • 60 transplant centers and growing
  • National (U.S.) kidney exchange?
  • Enabling legislation passed the Senate (Feb. 15
    2007) and House (March 7, 2007)
  • Still to be signed into law.
  • It says that the valuable consideration clause of
    the NOTA "does not apply with respect to human
    organ paired donation."

12
Thicker market and more efficient exchange?
  • Establish a national exchange
  • Make kidney exchange available not just to
    incompatible patient-donor pairs, but also to
    those who are compatible but might nevertheless
    benefit from exchange
  • E.g. a compatible middle aged patient-donor pair,
    and an incompatible patient-donor pair with a 25
    year old donor could both benefit from exchange.
  • This would also relieve the present shortage of
    donors with blood type O in the kidney exchange
    pool, caused by the fact that O donors are only
    rarely incompatible with their intended
    recipient.

13
First NEAD chains Rees et al. 2007
  • In July 2007, the Alliance for Paired Donation
    started the first of these chains when an
    altruistic donor in Michigan donated his kidney
    to a woman in Phoenix, Arizona.
  • As of the end of September this first NEAD chain
    was at 4 transplants (M. in MI gave to B. in AZ
    whose husband R. gave to An. in Toledo, whose mom
    La. gave to Ce. in Columbus whose daughter Li.
    gave to G. in Columbus simultaneously with Ce.'s
    transplant, and now G's sister Av. is the next
    bridge donor) (3 bridge donors donated so far)
  • The APD started a second NEAD chain on Dec 7,
    2007 with a NDD T who gave to D in Columbus
    whose daughter M gave to S in Orlando, whose
    daughter E flew to Toledo to give to R from
    Tennessee which didnt work, but she bridged
    instead to MT in Toledo, whose daughter A will be
    the next bridge donor (3 transplants so far, 1
    from a bridge donor)

14
First NEAD chains Rees et al. 2007
  • In July 2007, the Alliance for Paired Donation
    started the first of these chains

MI
OH
Toledo
M (altruistic donor)
Columbus
An (Patient)
Ans mon
Ce (Patient)
AZ
Ces daughter
B (Patient)
Bs husband
G (Patient)
Gs sister
15
Centers (hospitals) are a problem
  • Centers with matched pairs do not have an
    incentive to report those pairs
  • What if one of those pairs is not matched
    immediately?
  • Proposition It is possible to efficiently
    arrange matches so that each center can be
    guaranteed that all pairs that they can exchange
    themselves will be part of the efficient exchange
    selected.
  • priority matching with Center-matched pairs
    designated by the center) given top priority.

16
Conjecture
  • With an appropriately designed Kidney Exchange
    (e.g. in which each hospital does not see the
    patient-donor pairs contributed by the other
    hospitals until a match is suggested) it will
    always/(almost always) be a best reply for each
    hospital to submit all of its pairs to the
    Exchange (after noting which ones could be
    matched internally).

17
Kidney exchange summary
  • Need a thick market
  • So a national exchange will be better than
    regional exchanges
  • Enabling legislation passed the Senate and House
    in 2007not yet signed into law
  • kidney paired donation shall not be considered
    to involve the transfer of a human organ for
    valuable consideration...
  • A national exchange will require overcoming
    incentive problems among transplant centers
    (which we see even in New Englands 14 transplant
    centers)
  • Need to overcome congestion to be able to do
    3-way as well as 2-way exchange.
  • There are big benefits to opening up kidney
    exchange to compatible patient-donor pairs also.
  • Monetary exchange is repugnant
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