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Technical Methods for Organ Procurement Organizations (OPO) Specific Reports

Table of Contents

Introduction

Table 1. Number of Deceased Donors and Organs Recovered

Donor Count
Donations After Cardiac Death (DCD)
Expanded Criteria Donors (ECD)
Standard Criteria Donors (SCD)
Donors per Organ
Organs Recovered
Organ Recovered per Donor (average)
Organs Transplanted
Organs Transplanted per Donor (average)
Percentage of Organs Transplanted

Table 2. Number and Location of Organs Transplanted for Organs Recovered from Deceased Donors within This DSA/OPO

This DSA/OPO
Transplant Centers Served by this DSA/OPO
Other Centers

Table 3. Measures of Donor Procurement Rates

Deceased Donors (All)
Deceased Donors Meeting Eligibility Criteria
Additional Donors
Eligible Deaths
Observed (Crude) Donation Rate
Observed (Crude) Organ-Specific Rates
Notifiable Death Count
Observed (Crude) Notification Rate
Expected Measures of Donation

Table 3A. Measures of Donor Procurement Rates by Hospital

Table 4. Characteristics of Recovered Donors

Donor Count
Race
Age
Gender
Blood Type
Cause of Death
Donation After Cardiac Death (DCD)

Table 5. Characteristics of Recovered Donors, By Organ

Donor Count by Organ
Race
Age
Gender
Blood Type
Cause of Death
Donation After Cardiac Death (DCD)
Expanded Criteria Donors

Table 6. Percent Transplanted (Excludes Living Donor Recipients) for Waitlist Patients at this Center

Table 7. Time to Transplant for Waitlist Candidates

Table 8. Summaries for Characteristics of Deceased Donor Transplant Recipients by Organ Transplanted

Total Number of Transplants
Race
Age
Gender
Blood Type
Peak Panel Reactive Antibody (Kidney, Pancreas and Kidney/Pancreas Programs Only)
Primary Cause of Disease (Not Shown for Pancreas and Kidney/Pancreas)
Recipient Medical Urgency Status at Transplant (Shown for Recipients of Deceased Donor Liver and Heart Donors Only)
Expanded Criteria Donors (Kidney Only)

Table 9. Counties Assigned to This OPO by HCFA by Year

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Introduction

There are 9 tables that report statistics for the 59 individual Organ Procurement Organizations (OPOs) and their Donation Service Areas (DSAs). The statistics in these tables are based on data available from the Organ Procurement and Transplant Network (OPTN) as of April 30, 2010. These tables report organ procurement and transplantation activities. Generally, the same conventions that have been used previously by the OPTN to tabulate donors, organs, transplants, and transplant operations were used here. These tables are described individually below.

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Table 1. Number of Deceased Donors and Organs Recovered

The "Recovered (n)" columns of Table 1 summarize the number of deceased donors and the number of organs recovered and the number of organs transplanted, by type of organ, between January 2008 and December 2009. The average number of organs recovered and transplanted per donor is reported; the percentage of recovered organs that are transplanted is also shown. These calculation are displayed among all donors and by donor type (Standard Criteria Donors, Donors after Cardiac Death and Expanded Criteria Donors). 

Donor Count
The total number of recovered donors during these years by this DSA/OPO and throughout the U.S. is reported. Recovered donors include any donor from whom at least one solid organ was recovered for the intent of transplantation, regardless of whether the organ was transplanted or not. This table includes donors of all organ types in the deceased donor population.

Donation After Cardiac Death (DCD)
The number of recovered donors that were reported as "donation after cardiac death" is reported for each year. These donors are also included in the total donor count.

Expanded Criteria Donors (ECD)
The number of donors meeting the expanded donor criteria is reported. Donors that meet the expanded criteria are those over 60 years of age and those between 50 and 59 years of age meeting two of the following three conditions: died of a stroke, had a history of hypertension, or had a serum creatinine of greater than 1.5. Expanded Criteria Donors donating after cardiac death are included here and counted as ECD donors and not DCD donors.

Standard Criteria Donors (SCD)
The number of donors that are neither Expanded Criteria Donors (ECD) nor Donors after Cardiac Death (DCD) is also reported. These donors are less than 50 years of age, or they are between ages 50 and 59 meeting one or none of the following three conditions: died of a stroke, had a history of hypertension, or had a serum creatinine of greater than 1.5. Furthermore, these donors had their organs recovered prior to cardiac death.

Donors per Organ
The number of donors from which each organ was recovered is reported. Additionally, the percent of all donors from which each organ was recovered is shown. For example, if there were 100 total donors shown above, and kidneys were recovered from 92 of these donors, then 92% of donors would be counted as kidney donors.

Organs Recovered
The total number of each organ recovered for each year is reported. This number is calculated as the sum of recovered organs by organ type, i.e., in the case of kidneys recovered, up to two kidneys can be recovered from an individual donor; however, only one heart can be recovered from each donor.

Technical note: pairs of kidneys recovered “en-bloc” and pairs of lungs recovered “en-bloc” are counted as two organs each. Kidney recoveries are counted separately from pancreas recoveries, regardless of whether they were transplanted together. Similarly, other organ combinations (hearts and lungs) were counted individually, regardless of whether they were transplanted together. Heart valves are not counted as recovered organs. Each liver was counted only once, even if it was split for transplantation. Organs divided into segments (liver, lung, pancreas, intestine) are counted as being recovered only once for that organ; 

Organs Recovered per Donor (average)

The average number of organs recovered per donor is calculated and shown here, taking into account the disparity in the number of organs recovered per donor (ORPD) among ECD, DCD and Standard Criteria Donors (SCD). Stratifying by these 3 categories of deceased donors takes into consideration the difference in OPO practice in pursuing ”non-traditional” donors. For comparison purposes, corresponding data for the entire U.S are also reported.

Organs Transplanted
The number of organs recovered at this DSA/OPO that resulted in a transplant for each year is shown in the columns labeled "Transplanted" under "This DSA". This number includes organs recovered in this DSA/OPO that were exported to another DSA/OPO for transplant. Organs divided into segments (liver, lung, pancreas, intestine) may account for more than one transplant, meaning it is possible for the number transplanted to exceed the number recovered.

Note that this is based on a count of recovered organs that were transplanted, which differs from the number of transplant operations. Since multiple organs can result in one transplant procedure (i.e. a double lung transplant) and a single organ can result in multiple transplant procedures (i.e. liver segments), the totals in this table may not agree with transplant counts in other tables. For the purposes of comparison, corresponding data for the entire U.S., at each time period, are also reported.

Organs Transplanted per Donor (average)

The average number of organs transplanted per donor is calculated and shown here, taking into account the disparity in the number of organs recovered per donor (ORPD) among ECD, DCD and Standard Criteria Donors (SCD).

Percentage of Organs Transplanted

The percentage of organs transplanted among all organs recovered. This percentage is calculated both for organs in total and by organ type. Also, it is shown for each of the donor types.

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Table 2. Number and Location of Organs Transplanted for Organs Recovered from Deceased Donors within This DSA/OPO

Table 2 summarizes the number, type, and location of deceased donor organs transplanted within this DSA/OPO as well as those exported and transplanted at transplant centers in other DSAs/OPOs between January 2008 and December 2009.

This DSA/OPO
The total number of each organ type that was recovered within this DSA/OPO and that resulted in a transplant (whether at a transplant center in this DSA/OPO service area or the service area of another DSA/OPO) during these years is reported. This includes only organs that were recovered from a deceased donor by this DSA/OPO and is a count of the number of organs transplanted, not the number of transplant procedures. Since multiple organs can result in one transplant procedure (i.e. a double lung transplant) and a single organ can result in multiple transplant procedures (i.e. liver segments), the totals in this table may not agree with transplant counts found in other tables.

Transplant Centers Served by this DSA/OPO
The transplant centers that are served by this DSA/OPO are listed. The total number of each organ type transplanted in each transplant center using organs recovered within this DSA/OPO during these years is reported. Again, this is the number of organs transplanted by each center within the DSA/OPO, not the number of transplant procedures that occurred at each transplant center.

Other Centers
The number of organs recovered by this DSA/OPO that were exported to a transplant center covered by another DSA/OPO and transplanted is reported.

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Table 3. Measures of Donor Procurement Rates

The nation's Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN) consists of 59 separate Donation Service Areas (DSAs). A DSA consists of an Organ Procurement Organization (OPO), at least one transplant center, and two or more hospitals. Table 3 provides measures of donation rates and the basic components that determine these rates for each of the DSAs. In addition, the table provides the national distribution of select observed measures as a reference for each DSA.

The first section of table 3 presents observed donor recovery and referral data reported to the OPTN/SRTR from January 2009 and December 2009.

Deceased Donors (All)
All deceased donors recovered in this DSA.

Deceased Donors Meeting Eligibility Criteria
Deceased donors aged 0-70 meeting death by neurological criteria are included; additionally these donors must meet all OPTN criteria for eligible death.

Additional Donors
Deceased donors age greater than 70, Donation after Cardiac Death (DCD) donors, or donors that otherwise do not meet the OPTN criteria for eligible death are included here.

Eligible Deaths
Any death or imminent death (ventilated and non-ventilated) reported by a hospital that is evaluated and meets organ donor eligibility requirements. Any patient aged 70 or younger meeting death by neurological criteria, based on the American Academy of Neurology Practice parameters for determining brain death, who does not have any of the following indications:

  • Tuberculosis
  • Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection with Specified Conditions
  • Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease
  • Herpetic Septicemia
  • Rabies
  • Reactive Hepatitis B Surface Antigen
  • Any retrovirus infection
  • Active Malignant Neoplasms, except Primary CNS tumors and skin cancers
  • Hodgkin's Disease, Multiple Myeloma, Leukemia
  • Miscellaneous Carcinomas
  • Aplastic Anemia
  • Agranulocytosis
  • Fungal and Viral Encephalitis
  • Gangrene of Bowel
  • Extreme Immaturity
  • Positive Serological or Viral Culture Findings for HIV

Observed (Crude) Donation Rate
The number of Deceased Donors Meeting Eligibility Criteria per 100 Eligible Deaths is reported.

Observed (Crude) Organ-Specific Rates
The number of donors of each organ type meeting eligibility criteria per 100 Eligible deaths is shown. These rates are provided for kidney, liver, heart, lung and pancreas.

Notifiable Death Count
This count includes the subset of all in-hospital deaths age 0-70 with no exclusionary medical diagnoses for possible donation. The number of Notifiable Deaths is based on methodology to determine the relevant subset of deaths in a geographic area, described in Ojo et al, Transplantation, 1999.
In May 2005, the SRTR criteria for identifying a notifiable death was modified to reflect OPTN cause of death exclusionary criteria for determining eligible deaths. This modification results in higher notifiable death counts nationally.

Observed (Crude) Notification Rate
The number of Eligible Deaths per 100 Notifiable Deaths is reported. SRTR adjustments (described above) to the Notifiable Death count have resulted in lower Observed Notification Rates nationally.

Expected Donation Rate
The Expected Donation Rate is the rate expected for an OPO based on the national experience for OPOs serving similar eligible donor populations and donation service areas. The Expected Donation Rate is adjusted for the distributions of age, gender, race and cause of death among eligible deaths.

Expected Organ Specific Rates
Organ-specific rates examine differences among DSAs in the evaluation and conversion of potential donors by examining the expected number of donors of each particular organ type among all eligible deaths.

Ratio of Observed to Expected Donation Rate
The Standardized Ratios provided in this section are calculated as the ratio of observed to expected donation rates where 1.0 is equal to the reference. A ratio above 1.0 indicates that the observed measure for an OPO is greater than what would be expected given the national experience, while a ratio below 1.0 indicates that the observed measure is less than what would be expected given the national experience.

Random Variation
The ratio reported is an estimate of the true ratio of donation rates in this DSA relative to the national donation rates. A ratio different from 1.00 indicates that the true donation rates in the DSA differ from the national donation rates. However, the value of the ratio varies from year to year above and below the true ratio due to random variation. Thus, the ratio could differ from 1.00 due to random variation, rather than due to a true difference between the donation rates in the DSA and in the nation. Both the p-value and the confidence interval, discussed below, are designed to help in the interpretation of the ratio in the face of such random fluctuations.

95% Confidence Interval
The 95% confidence intervals of these ratios reflect the random variation of the observed counts that can be expected over time. The intervals provide a range of plausible values for the true ratio of DSA-to-national donation rates, in light of the observed ratio. The range includes the true ratio 95% of the time. The width of the confidence interval varies by DSA, depending on the amount of data available and the variability within the data.

P-value
The p-value represents the probability that the number of donors would be as far or further from the expected number as the observed number of donors was, if the variability in number of donors were caused by random chance alone. It measures the statistical significance (or evidence) for testing the (two-sided) hypothesis that the difference between the observed and expected donation rate is zero. A p-value less than or equal to 0.05 indicates that the difference between the observed and expected donation rate is probably real and is not due to random chance, while a p-value greater than 0.05 indicates that the difference could plausibly be due to random chance. Note about one-sided vs. two-sided p-values: The two-sided p-values presented in the OSRs are used to identify cases where observed rates are statistically different from (either above or below) the expected rate. In other words, a two-sided p-value is used when the direction of the difference is not hypothesized. Since OSRs are intended to measure a difference in either direction, a two-sided p-value is shown. A one-sided p-value is used to test a hypothesis of a difference in a specific direction (e.g., lower than expected). To compute a one-sided p-value, divide the two-sided p-value in half, for the cases where the observed difference is in the hypothesized direction. For example, if the two-sided p-value is 0.046 then the one-sided p-value would be 0.023.

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Table 3A. Measures of Donor Procurement Rates by Hospital

This table provides the observed and expected measures of donation rates by hospital for each Donation Service Area. Hospitals are identified as unique providers by a considering the combination of provider number and provider name along with city, state and zip code of provider. The standardized ratio and p-value comparing observed to expected are also provided. Within each DSA, the observed meausres aggregate to the DSA-level donation statistics in Table 3.

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Table 4. Characteristics of Recovered Donors

Table 4 summarizes the characteristics of donors recovered during two time periods by this DSA/OPO. The two time periods are January 2008 through December 2008 and January 2009 through December 2009. For the purposes of comparison, corresponding data for the entire U.S., at each time period, are also reported.

Donor Count
The total number of recovered donors during this period by this DSA/OPO and throughout the U.S. is reported. Recovered donors include any donor from whom at least one organ was recovered, regardless of whether the organ was transplanted or not. This table identifies all donor types in the donor population. The summaries of the donor characteristics in Table 4 are based on these donor population counts.

Race
The percentage of recovered donors in each of five race categories is reported. Race and ethnicity are reported together as a single data element, reflecting their data collection (either race or ethnicity is required, but not both). Patients formerly coded as white and Hispanic are coded as Hispanic. Race and ethnicity sum to 100 percent. The categories are: Asian/Pacific Islander, Black, White, Hispanic/Latino, a combined group for other races, and Unknown is shown. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Age
Age was determined at the date of death/recovery of organs for each donor. The percentage of donors in each of several age ranges is reported. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Gender
The percentage of male and female donors is reported. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Blood Type
The percentage of donors by ABO type (O, A, B, AB) is reported. Donors with ABO type A, A1, or A2 were classified as A. Donors with ABO type AB, A1B, or A2B were classified as AB. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Cause of Death
The percentage of recovered donors in each of the major cause of death categories is reported. The categories for cause of death are: anoxia, stroke, CNS tumor, head trauma, other and unknown. Any missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Donation After Cardiac Death (DCD)
The percentage of recovered donors for which cardiac death had occurred is reported.

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Table 5. Characteristics of Recovered Donors, By Organ

Table 5 summarizes the characteristics of kidney, liver, and heart donors recovered from January 2008 through December 2009 by this DSA/OPO.

Donor Count by Organ
The total number of kidney, liver, and heart donors who were recovered during this period by this DSA/OPO is reported. Recovered donors include any donor from whom an organ was recovered, regardless of whether the organ was transplanted or not. This table identifies only donors from whom a liver, heart, or at least one kidney was recovered. The summaries of the donor characteristics in Table 5 are based on these donor population counts.

Race
The percentage of recovered donors in each of five race categories is reported. Race and ethnicity are reported together as a single data element, reflecting their data collection (either race or ethnicity is required, but not both). Patients formerly coded as white and Hispanic are coded as Hispanic. Race and ethnicity sum to 100 percent. The categories are: Asian/Pacific Islander, Black, White, Hispanic/Latino, a combined group for other races, and Unknown is shown.

Missing values were reported in the Unknown category. 

Age
Age was determined at the date of death/recovery of organs for each donor. The percentage of donors in each of several age ranges is reported. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Gender
The percentage of male and female donors is reported. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Blood Type
The percentage of donors by ABO type (O, A, B, AB) is reported. Donors with ABO type A, A1, or A2 were classified as A. Donors with ABO type AB, A1B, or A2B were classified as AB. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Cause of Death
The percentage of recovered donors in each of the major cause of death categories is reported. The categories for cause of death are: anoxia, stroke, CNS tumor, head trauma, other and unknown. Any missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Donation After Cardiac Death (DCD)
The percentage of recovered donors for which cardiac death had occurred is reported for each of the three organ types--kidney, liver, and heart.

Expanded Criteria Donors
The percentage of donors who met the expanded donor criteria is reported only for kidneys. Donors that meet the expanded criteria are those over 60 years of age and those between 50 and 59 years of age who either died of a stroke, had a history of hypertension, or had a serum creatinine of greater than 1.5.

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Table 6. Percent Transplanted (Excludes Living Donor Recipients) for Waitlist Patients at this Center

Table 6 gives the percentages of patients who received a transplant at the specified times (1 month, 1 year, 2 years, and 3 years after waitlisting) among those who were placed on the kidney waitlist at centers served by the given DSA/OPO from Jan 1, 2004 - Dec 31, 2006. This information is given for the DSA/OPO and, for purposes of comparison, for the U.S. as a whole. The data exclude patients who were removed from the waitlist with a removal code indicating transplant from a living donor.

This analysis includes patients whose waitlist status was temporarily inactive and patients who spent periods of time in temporarily inactive status. The statistics are calculated as simple fractions and the analysis does not censor patients if they were removed for reasons other than receiving a transplant. Thus, patients who die before receiving a transplant are counted at all times as not having received a transplant. Each percentage is calculated among all patients and separately for different classifications of: race, age, gender, blood type, previous transplant, primary disease, and peak PRA.

The percentage shown is calculated as: 100  (number of patients placed on the waitlist between 1/1/2004 12:00:00 AM and 12/31/2006 12:00:00 AM who received a transplant prior to a specified number of months after waitlisting) / (total number of patients placed on the waitlist between 1/1/2004 12:00:00 AM and 12/31/2006 12:00:00 AM).

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Table 7. Time to Transplant for Waitlist Candidates

Table 7 gives the median (50th percentile) waiting time until transplant (both deceased and living related transplants) for patients who were placed on the waitlist for a kidney, liver, or heart between January 1, 2004 and June 30, 2009, as well as the 5th, 10th, 25th and 75th percentile waiting times. All percentiles are shown only when applicable. The information in this table is for all patients placed on the waitlist at a center in the given DSA/OPO during the applicable time period. For purposes of comparison, corresponding times to transplant at each percentile for the U.S. as a whole are also reported. Patients with multiple waitlistings are counted multiple times in this analysis.

Waiting time until transplant is calculated as the time (in months) after a candidate is placed on the waitlist, by which the corresponding percent of all patients initially waitlisted had been removed from the waitlist for receiving a transplant. A Kaplan-Meier model was used with censoring on a) December 31, 2009, for those registrations still waiting on that date; and b) the date of removal from the waiting list for recovery, or c) the date of removal from the waiting list for a transfer. If a cell is blank then less than that percentage of patients placed had received a transplant by the end of follow-up.

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Table 8. Summaries for Characteristics of Deceased Donor Transplant Recipients by Organ Transplanted

Table 8 summarizes the characteristics of deceased donor transplant recipients who received a transplant between between January 2008 and December 2008 or between January 2009 and December 2009 at transplant centers within the service area of this DSA/OPO, with corresponding average values among recipients in this region and the U.S. Only transplants resulting from locally procured donors or from organs imported from another DSA/OPO to a transplant center in the service area of this DSA/OPO are included. Transplants resulting from organs exported from this DSA/OPO to a transplant center in the service area of another DSA/OPO are excluded. Separate tables are provided for kidney, kidney/pancreas, pancreas, liver, heart, heart-lung, and lung transplants.

Total Number of Transplants
The total number of patients who received locally procured organ transplants during this period at transplant centers within the service area of this DSA/OPO is reported. The summaries of the patient characteristics in Table 6 are based on the patient population count.

Race
The percentage of recovered donors in each of five race categories is reported. Race and ethnicity are reported together as a single data element, reflecting their data collection (either race or ethnicity is required, but not both). Patients formerly coded as white and Hispanic are coded as Hispanic. Race and ethnicity sum to 100 percent. The categories are: Asian/Pacific Islander, Black, White, Hispanic/Latino, a combined group for other races, and Unknown is shown.

Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.   

Age
Age was determined at the date of transplant for each patient. The percentage of recipients in each of several age ranges is reported. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Gender
The percentage of male and female recipients is reported. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Blood Type
The percentage of recipients by ABO type (O, A, B, AB) is reported. Recipients with ABO type A, A1, or A2 were classified as A. Recipients with ABO type AB, A1B, or A2B were classified as AB. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Peak Panel Reactive Antibody (Kidney, Pancreas and Kidney/Pancreas Programs Only)
The recipients' highest panel reactive antibody (PRA) on the waitlist is shown for recipients who received a kidney, pancreas, or kidney/pancreas. The percentage of recipients in each of several PRA ranges (0-9, 10-79, 80+) is reported. Missing values were reported in the Unknown category.

Primary Cause of Disease (Not Shown for Pancreas and Kidney/Pancreas)
The percentage of patients in each of the major categories of primary cause of organ failure is reported. The major categories for each organ are shown below. Primary diagnosis group is not shown for pancreas and kidney/pancreas because virtually all such patients received a transplant for diabetes mellitus.

Kidney

  • Glomerular diseases
  • Tubular and interstitial disease
  • Polycystic kidney disease
  • Congenital, familial, metabolic renal diseases
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Renovascular vascular diseases
  • Neoplasms
  • Hypertensive nephrosclerosis
  • Retransplant/graft failure
  • Other kidney diseases
  • Missing

Liver

  • Acute hepatic necrosis
  • Non-cholestatic cirrhosis
  • Cholestatic liver disease/cirrhosis
  • Biliary atresia
  • Metabolic diseases
  • Malignant neoplasms
  • Other
  • Missing

Intestine

  • Short gut syndrome
  • Functional bowel problem
  • Retransplant/graft failure
  • Other
  • Missing

Heart

  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Retransplant/graft failure
  • Valvular heart disease
  • Congenital heart disease
  • Other
  • Missing

Lung

  • Congenital disease
  • Retransplant/graft failure
  • Primary pulmonary hypertension
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
  • Alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency
  • Emphysema/Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
  • Other
  • Missing

Heart-Lung

  • Congenital disease
  • Retransplant/graft failure
  • Primary pulmonary hypertension
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
  • Alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency
  • Emphysema/Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
  • Other
  • Missing

Recipient Medical Urgency Status at Transplant (Shown for Recipients of Deceased Donor Liver and Heart Donors Only)
The recipients' medical urgency status at the time of transplant is shown for deceased donor livers and hearts only. The percentage of recipients in each of status type (Livers: Status 1, 2A, 2B, 3, Temporarily Inactive; Hearts: Status 1, 1A, 1B, 2, Temporarily Inactive) is reported.

Beginning on February 27, 2002 candidates for liver transplants were classified by MELD or PELD score rather than medical urgency status. However, Status 1 and "temporarily inactive" candidates were still grouped by their respective statuses. MELD and PELD scores were computed based on the candidates’ laboratory measures at the time of transplant. The following groups appear for liver recipients after February 27, 2002: Status 1, MELD 6-10, MELD 11-20, MELD 21-30, MELD 31-40, PELD 10 or less, PELD 11-20, PELD 21-30, PELD greater than 30, and Temporarily Inactive.

Expanded Criteria Donors (Kidney Only)
The percentage of donors who met the expanded donor criteria is shown. Donors that meet the expanded criteria are those over 60 years of age and those between 50 and 59 years of age who either died of a stroke, had a history of hypertension, or had a serum creatinine of greater than 1.5.

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Table 9. Counties Assigned to This DSA/OPO by HCFA by Year

Table 9 displays the HCFA-designated service area covered by each DSA/OPO. Service areas are mapped by county borders and are re-assigned by HCFA on a routine basis. Service areas are open for competition every 2 years. Any DSA/OPO can request more or less service area during the "open season" every two years. After the year 2000, these designations will last for a period of 4 years. HCFA negotiates with the DSAs/OPOs to reach the final assignment. This table shows the changes in service area by county for this DSA/OPO during the years for which data were available.

DSA/OPO Directories have been produced by HCFA during the years 2000 - 2002. These directories document the designation of service areas by county. There is no overlap of service areas in recent years. Beginning in 2003, assignments reflect actual referral (from each hospital to each OPO) data reported by the OPO/DSA. For counties with no referring hospitals, CMS service area data are used.

Table 9 depicts a full listing of the counties served by any particular DSA/OPO during each year listed. The information is shown by county with the corresponding Federal Information Processing (FIPs) code, the county name, and the state in which it resides. There is an "X" in the column for the year(s) for which this county was served by this DSA/OPO, a blank space for the year(s) that this county was not served by this DSA/OPO, and counties covered by more than one DSA/OPO during a particular time period are designated in the table with an "S" for "Split" counties.

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