The cost of procuring deceased donor kidneys: Evidence from OPO cost reports 2013-2017. American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons Held, P. J., Bragg-Gresham, J. L., Peters, T. n., Chertow, G. M., McCormick, F. n., Roberts, J. P. 2019

Abstract

Using 5-years of US organ procurement organization (OPO) data, we determined the cost of recovering a viable (i.e., transplanted) kidney for each of 51 OPOs. We also examined the effects on OPO costs of the recovery of non-viable (i.e., discarded) kidneys and other OPO metrics. Annual cost reports from 51 independent OPOs were used to determine the cost per recovered kidney for each OPO. A quadratic regression model was employed to estimate the relationship between the cost of kidneys and the number of viable kidneys recovered, as well as other OPO performance indicators. The cost of transplanted kidneys at individual OPOs ranged widely from $24,000 to $56,000, and the average was $36,000. The cost of a viable kidney tended to decline with the number of kidneys procured up to 549 kidneys per year and then increase. Of the total 81,401 kidneys recovered, 66,454 were viable and 14,947 (18.4%) were non-viable. The costs of kidneys varied widely over the OPOs studied, and costs were a function of the recovered number of viable and non-viable organs, local cost levels, donation after cardiac death (DCD), year, and Standardized Donor Rate Ratio (SDRR). Cost increases were 3% per year.

View details for DOI 10.1111/ajt.15669

View details for PubMedID 31667990