Living organ donation

27 Apr 2021 01:38 PM

This POSTnote describes the scale and nature of living donation in the UK, its regulatory framework and the ethical considerations around this highly regulated procedure. It also analyses challenges within living organ donation, and the strategies implemented to address them.

Documents to download

Living organ donation refers to the transplant of an organ (such as a kidney or a lobe of liver) from a living donor. Kidneys are the most donated organ, accounting for 98% of living organ donations in 2019/20. As of March 2020, 4,960 patients were waiting for a kidney transplant. The average waiting time for a deceased donation was 2.5-3 years. Living organ donation is a highly regulated procedure. It offers better patient outcomes and a more cost-effective approach than deceased organ donation or alternative therapies but carries with it potential risks for the donors. These are minimised through rigorous health and psychological evaluations, and extensive donor aftercare. While there is a 1 in 3,000 risk of death for living kidney donors, living kidney transplants are not associated with any excess donor mortality, kidney failure or other disease. It is widely accepted that the risks are outweighed by the benefits to the recipient and to wider society (through reduced waiting lists and improved population health).

The new 10-year strategy for increasing living organ donation and transplantation is due to be published by NHS Blood and Transplant in Spring 2021.

Key Points

Acknowledgements

POSTnotes are based on literature reviews and interviews with a range of stakeholders and are externally peer-reviewed. POST would like to thank interviewees and peer reviewers for kindly giving up their time during the preparation of this briefing, including:

Members of the POST Board*

Lisa Burnapp, NHS Blood and Transplant, British Transplantation Society*

Jessica Porter, Human Tissue Authority*

Jen Lumsdaine, NHS

Ofcom

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Paul Dooley, Matching Donors

Dr Adnan Sharif, University Hospitals Birmingham*

Dr Pippa Bailey, University of Bristol*

Dr Greg Moorlock, University of Warwick

Mr Videha Sharma, University of Manchester*

Dr Sara Machado, London School of Economics

Professor Gurch Randhawa, University of Bedfordshire*

Professor Neil Lunt, University of York

Professor Nithya Krishnan, University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire

Dr William Pettersson, University of Glasgow

Dr Daniel-Clement Osei-Bordom, University of Birmingham*

Katharine Wright, Nuffield Council of Bioethics*

Jan Shorrock, Give a Kidney*

*denotes people and organisations who acted as external reviewers of the briefing.