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Review
. 2025 Jan 1;109(1):22-35.
doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000005124. Epub 2024 Oct 22.

Expanding Opportunities for Living Donation: Recommendations From the 2023 Santander Summit to Ensure Donor Protections, Informed Decision Making, and Equitable Access

Collaborators, Affiliations
Review

Expanding Opportunities for Living Donation: Recommendations From the 2023 Santander Summit to Ensure Donor Protections, Informed Decision Making, and Equitable Access

Krista L Lentine et al. Transplantation. .

Abstract

A strategic vision toward global convergence in transplantation must encourage and remove barriers to living organ donation and transplantation. Here, we discuss deliberations of a working group of the 2023 Santander Summit charged with formulating recommendations for the safe expansion of living donor kidney transplantation and living donor liver transplantation worldwide. Living donor kidney transplantation has grown to be the preferred treatment for advanced kidney failure. Living donor liver transplantation emerged more recently as a strategy to reduce waitlist mortality, with adoption influenced by cultural factors, regional policies, clinical team experience, and the maturity of regional deceased donor transplant systems. Barriers to living donor transplantation span domains of education, infrastructure, risk assessment/risk communication, and financial burden to donors. Paired donor exchange is a growing option for overcoming incompatibilities to transplantation but is variably used across and within countries. Effectively expanding access to living donor transplantation requires multifaceted strategies, including improved education and outreach, and measures to enhance efficiency, transparency, and shared decision making in donor candidate evaluation. Efforts toward global dissemination and vigilant oversight of best practices and international standards for the assessment, informed consent, approval, and monitoring of living donors are needed. Fostering greater participation in paired exchange requires eliminating disincentives and logistical obstacles for transplant programs and patients, and establishing an ethical and legal framework grounded in World Health Organization Guiding Principles. Sharing of best practices from successful countries and programs to jurisdictions with emerging practices is vital to safely expand the practice of living donation worldwide and bring the field together globally.

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Conflict of interest statement

Authors are volunteer members of the Organización Nacional de Trasplantes Santander Summit Living Donation Workgroup. K.L.L. is the scientific director of the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) Living Donor Collective, chair of the American Society of Transplantation Living Donor Community of Practice, and a member of the American Society of Nephrology Policy and Advocacy Committee, the National Kidney Foundation Transplant Advisory Committee, and the National Living Donor Assistance Center (NLDAC) Advisory Group. K.L.L. receives funding for research related to organ donation and transplantation from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive Diseases (NIDDK; R01-DK120551) and the Mid-America Transplant Foundation. A.D.W. is deputy director of the SRTR Living Donor Collective and a member of the NLDAC Advisory Group. A.D.W. receives funding for research related to organ donation and transplantation from the NIDDK, the National Institute of Health, and the Agency for Research and Quality. S.N. is co-chair of the Declaration of Istanbul Custodian Group. Unrelated to this work, K.L.L. receives consulting fees from CareDx and speaker honoraria from Sanofi. The other authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

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