Transplant benefit-based offering of deceased donor livers in the United Kingdom

J Hepatol. 2024 Sep;81(3):471-478. doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2024.03.020. Epub 2024 Mar 21.

Abstract

Background & aims: The National Liver Offering Scheme (NLOS) was introduced in the UK in 2018 to offer livers from deceased donors to patients on the national waiting list based, for most patients, on calculated transplant benefit. Before NLOS, livers were offered to transplant centres by geographic donor zones and, within centres, by estimated recipient need for a transplant.

Methods: UK Transplant Registry data on patient registrations and transplants were analysed to build statistical models for survival on the list (M1) and survival post-transplantation (M2). A separate cohort of registrations - not seen by the models before - was analysed to simulate what liver allocation would have been under M1, M2 and a transplant benefit score (TBS) model (combining both M1 and M2), and to compare these allocations to what had been recorded in the UK Transplant Registry. The number of deaths on the waiting list and patient life years were used to compare the different simulation scenarios and to select the optimal allocation model. Registry data were monitored, pre- and post-NLOS, to understand the performance of the scheme.

Results: The TBS was identified as the optimal model to offer donation after brain death (DBD) livers to adult and large paediatric elective recipients. In the first 2 years of NLOS, 68% of DBD livers were offered using the TBS to this type of recipient. Monitoring data indicate that mortality on the waiting list post-NLOS significantly decreased compared with pre-NLOS (p <0.0001), and that patient survival post-listing was significantly greater post- compared to pre-NLOS (p = 0.005).

Conclusions: In the first two years of NLOS offering, waiting list mortality fell while post-transplant survival was not negatively impacted, delivering on the scheme's objectives.

Impact and implications: The National Liver Offering Scheme (NLOS) was introduced in the UK in 2018 to increase transparency of the deceased donor liver offering process, maximise the overall survival of the waiting list population, and improve equity of access to liver transplantation. To our knowledge, it is the first scheme that offers organs based on statistical prediction of transplant benefit: the transplant benefit score. The results are important to the transplant community - from healthcare practitioners to patients - and demonstrate that, in the first two years of NLOS offering, waiting list mortality fell while post-transplant survival was not negatively impacted, thus delivering on the scheme's objectives. The scheme continues to be monitored to ensure that the transplant benefit score remains up-to-date and that signals that suggest the possible disadvantage of some patients are investigated.

Keywords: Liver transplantation; equity of access; organ donation after brain death; organ donation after circulatory death; organ offering and allocation; survival on the waiting list; survival post-transplantation; transplant benefit.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Child
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Liver Transplantation* / methods
  • Liver Transplantation* / statistics & numerical data
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Registries* / statistics & numerical data
  • Tissue Donors* / statistics & numerical data
  • Tissue Donors* / supply & distribution
  • Tissue and Organ Procurement* / methods
  • Tissue and Organ Procurement* / statistics & numerical data
  • United Kingdom
  • Waiting Lists*