Although a disease is defined as rare when it has a prevalence of less than 1:2000, the overall prevalence of rare diseases in the population is greater than 1%. Among potential organ donors, a similar frequency is observed. To date, guidelines have not been established, and operational decisions have been made empirically, case- by-case, based on the experience and expertise of clinicians. For this reason, the Italian Superior Health Council (CSS) has appointed a working Group to address “patients with a rare disease as potential organ donors,” with the aim of devising recommendations for the management of transplant cases in which the donors have a rare disease. This group evaluated 493 diseases (10% of all rare diseases, including over 95% of patients with a rare disease) to deliver a technical report dealing with the suitability of organ donation and transplantation, with a focus on the organs most frequently used, including kidney, liver, heart, lung, and pancreas. This work has made it clear that a rare disease “per se” does not contraindicate organ donation at all. Indeed, in donors affected by a rare disease, almost 80% of the organs are suitable for transplantation, approximately 7% are unsuitable, and approximately 14% are suitable as non-standard with an acceptable risk.

Dallapiccola, B., Moriconi, S., Rugge, M., Cardillo, M., Carcassi, C., Colledan, M., et al. (2022). Organ donation from patients with a rare disease is often safe: the italian guidelines. CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, 36(9) [10.1111/ctr.14769].

Organ donation from patients with a rare disease is often safe: the italian guidelines

Colledan M.;
2022

Abstract

Although a disease is defined as rare when it has a prevalence of less than 1:2000, the overall prevalence of rare diseases in the population is greater than 1%. Among potential organ donors, a similar frequency is observed. To date, guidelines have not been established, and operational decisions have been made empirically, case- by-case, based on the experience and expertise of clinicians. For this reason, the Italian Superior Health Council (CSS) has appointed a working Group to address “patients with a rare disease as potential organ donors,” with the aim of devising recommendations for the management of transplant cases in which the donors have a rare disease. This group evaluated 493 diseases (10% of all rare diseases, including over 95% of patients with a rare disease) to deliver a technical report dealing with the suitability of organ donation and transplantation, with a focus on the organs most frequently used, including kidney, liver, heart, lung, and pancreas. This work has made it clear that a rare disease “per se” does not contraindicate organ donation at all. Indeed, in donors affected by a rare disease, almost 80% of the organs are suitable for transplantation, approximately 7% are unsuitable, and approximately 14% are suitable as non-standard with an acceptable risk.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
guidelines; organ donors; rare disease; risk assessment;
English
29-lug-2022
2022
36
9
e14769
none
Dallapiccola, B., Moriconi, S., Rugge, M., Cardillo, M., Carcassi, C., Colledan, M., et al. (2022). Organ donation from patients with a rare disease is often safe: the italian guidelines. CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, 36(9) [10.1111/ctr.14769].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/398273
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