Organ Donation Transplantation India: Overview
Organ Donation Transplantation India: Overview
Organ Donation Transplantation India: Overview
Journal of MAMC Journal of Medical Sciences Volume 2 Issue 1 January-April 2016 Pages ?-???
MAMC
Journal of
Medical Sciences
Special Issue:
Organ Transplant Scene in India
Official Publication
Maulana Azad Medical College
Abstract
This article reviews and describes the theoretical concept of organ donation (OD) and transplantation, historical milestones, need, shortage,
status of global activities, health system capacity, survival outcome, and update on legislative environment in India, Central/State contribution
and Nongovernment Organizations actively involved in OD.
Key words: Brain death, cadaver, capacity building, cardiac death, cornea, diabetes, health system, heart, hypertension, kidney, legislation,
liver, living donor, noncommunicable, procurement, program
Introduction
The consequences of rising burden of noncommunicable
diseases (especially diabetes and hypertension), living geriatric
population, and other risk exposures are propelling the graph
of organ failure across the globe including India. This, in
addition, is causing morbidity, mortality, poor quality of life,
social and financial catastrophe of the health system. Precious
human lives can be saved if ethically good quality organs are
retrieved from individual and transplanted to needed person
in prescribed time frame. However, it is assuming public
health significance due to ever increasing gap between need
and supply of human organs. Dead bodies are being burnt or
buried without even iota of thought being shed on wastage
of such vast natural reservoir. This phenomenon is akin to
scarcity in abundance as there is no lab manufactured
product available until date. Transplantation comprises the
processes of organ donation (OD) and subsequent implantation
or grafting. Organ donation and transplantation (ODT) has
roots in ancient Indian mythology with vivid examples, such
as guru Dadeech and Lord Ganesha, considered epitomes
of our rich culture, tradition, religion, spirituality, charity,
salvation, and science. This article reviews and describes
the theoretical concept of ODT, historical milestones, need,
shortage, status of global transplantation activities, health
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Website:
www.mamcjms.in
DOI:
10.4103/2394-7438.174832
18
Milestone
Undertaken by/at
1760
1903
Turkey recorded the highest living donor rate with 46.6 pmp
followed by South Korea (36.5 pmp), Lebanon (27.2 pmp),
Iceland (24.7 pmp), and USA (18.8 pmp).
During the consultative meet at Madrid 2010, a hierarchical
framework of country capacity[12] was agreed on for ODT,
ranging from the lowest (level 1) with no activity to the highest
(level 5) of well-developed health system [Table 2]. Developing
country like India falls in intermediate stage (level 3). A recent
development of last decade (2007) was starting of the global
observatory on OD and transplantation. According to latest
available (2013) information, approximately 118,127 solid
organs were reported to be transplanted across the globe that is
roughly 2.98% increase from the previous year. These included
kidney (79,325, 67.1%), liver (25,050, 21.2%), heart (6270,
5.3%), lung (4834, 4.0%), pancreas (2474, 2.0%), and small
bowel (174, 0.1%).[13]
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Definitions
Until 2007, there were no set definitions and terminologies
of OD and related field. A need for standardization for
uniform collection of data and information was felt for the
global database on donation and transplantation and resulting
collaborative effort of the WHO and Organizacion Nacional de
Trasplantes of Spain resulted in ground-breaking spade work.
Some of the standard definitions are as follows.[18]
Donation refers to donating human cells, tissues, or organs
intended for human applications. The donor is a human being,
living or deceased, who is a source of cells, tissues, or organs
for the purpose of transplantation.
An actual organ donor is deceased or living person from whom
at least one solid organ or part of it has been recovered for the
purpose of transplantation.
Living donor is a living human being from whom cells,
tissues, or organs have been removed for the purpose of
transplantation. A living donor has one of the following three
possible relationships with the recipient:
A = Related:
A1 = Genetically related:
1st degree genetic relative: Parent, sibling, offspring
2 nd degree genetic relative, e.g., grandparent,
grandchild, aunt, uncle, niece, nephew
Other than 1st or 2nd degree genetically related, e.g.,
cousin
A2 = Emotionally related: Spouse (if not genetically
related); in-laws; adopted; friend.
B = Unrelated
21
Types of Donors
Living donors
Deceased donors
22
Types of Transplant
Different types of transplant are as follows:
Autograft: A transplant of tissue from the person to oneself
(e.g., skin grafts, vein extraction for coronary artery
bypass graft, etc.)
Allograft: A transplanted organ or tissue from a genetically
non-identical member of the same species
Isograft: Organs or tissues are transplanted from one to
genetically identical other person (identical twin)
Xenotransplant: When transplantation is performed
between different species e.g., animal to human.
Process of Transplantation
Deceased donor:
1. Potential donor identification and screening of individuals
with brain death
2.
3.
4.
5.
Table3: Available information on number of solid organ transplantation undertaken by states in India
Year
Tamil Nadu
Andhra Pradesh
2000
459
2001
452
2002
437
2003
478
2004
468
2005
326
2006
141
2007
144
2008
93
2009
69
2010
93
2011
33
2012
39
-: Information: Not available
87
76
79
78
88
99
106
99
304
132
18
Delhi
Gujarat
Karnataka
Kerala
Punjab
70
73
87
89
97
107
110
124
90
139
49
11
103
136
125
116
99
70
76
80
96
93
97
105
101
102
85
110
102
253
110
36
107
98
72
41
59
76
45
55
74
57
60
46
113
94
62
24
41
31
28
50
23
Orissa
2
4
9
6
7
2
7
Uttar Pradesh
West Bengal
130
126
117
110
129
100
105
10
11
14
5
9
03
18
10
9
9
52
71
135
23
Developments in India
Central level
States level
Health education
Registry
Legislation
Conclusion
At any given time, every major city would have 810 brain
dead patients in various ICUs with 46% of all hospital deaths
being brain death. In India, road accidents account for around
1.4 lakh deaths annually and of these almost 65% sustain
severe head injuries as per a study carried out by AIIMS,
Delhi, meaning that there are almost 90,000 patients who may
be brain dead.[69] It is not that people do not want to donate,
but that there are no mechanisms in hospitals to identify and
certify brain deaths. It may also be pertinent to mention that
no one empowers the relatives of a brain dead person to save
lives of other people by donating their relative organs. Most
importantly young deaths occurring either due to road traffic
accidents or cardiovascular phenomenon provide the best
option of yielding high quality organs but also requires air and
road linkage (popularly known as dedicated green corridor)
with appropriate trauma and transplant hospitals. There is no
second thought that there are other imminent public health
challenges being faced by country and ODT may not receive
priority attention in the current socioeconomic and political
scenario. However, with each passing day, growing need and
demand, technological advancement, and spirits are taking
this movement forward. In our opinion, the day is not far
off in future when WHO declares OD as a theme for World
Health Day (7th April) to generate global interest, awareness,
and preparedness. To conclude, in an environment of flexible
bureaucratic procedures, system readiness, technical knowhow, and abundance of organs linked with high motivation,
positive attitude of health staff, transparent communication,
counseling and functional coordination of different institutions/
units will lead the graph reversal from low to high ODT
activities in India and may offer another functional model to
the world.
Website
NOTTO(Central Agency)
http://notto.nic.in
ORBO(Delhi, AIIMS)
www.orbo.org.in
DORSO(Delhi)
www.dorso.org
Mohan Foundation(Chennai)
www.mohanfoundation.org
Ganadarpan(Kolkata)
www.ganadarpanindia.in
Gift Your Organ(Karnataka)
www.giftyourorgan.org
Narmada Kidney Foundation(Mumbai) www.narmadakidney.org
Shatayu(Ahmedabad)
www.shatayu.org.in
Apex Kidney Foundation(Mumbai)
www.apexkidneyfoundation.org
TANKER(Tamil Nadu)
www.tankerfoundation.org
ZTCC(Mumbai)
www.ztccmumbai.org
ZCCK(Karnataka)
www.zcck.in
NOTTO: National Organ and Tissue Transplant Organization,
ORBO:Organ Retrieval Banking Organization, DORSO: Deceased Organ
Retrieval Sharing Organization, TANKER: Tamil Nadu Kidney Research,
ZTCC: Zonal Transplant Coordination Committee, ZCCK:Zonal
Coordination Committee of Karnataka, NGOs: Nongovernment
Organizations, OD: Organ donation
25
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of interest
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