Author/Authors :
Ghods J, Ahad Transplantation Unit - Hasheminejad Kidney Center - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
During the past decades, the number of altruistic living unrelated
kidney donations has substantially increased in developed
countries. However, the altruistic supply of transplantable kidneys
has remained much less than the demand. As a result, severe
kidney shortage has been associated with increasing number of
patient deaths and increasing number of commercial transplants
and transplant tourism. Studies have shown that there is still a
need for living kidney donation because even all potential braindead
donors cannot supply the escalating need for kidneys.
The use of living unrelated kidney donors should be morally
and ethically justified and should be compatible with ethical
principles. Many experts believe that increasing number of patient
deaths and commercial transplants will continue to happen if
kidney donation system remains merely altruistic. While some
transplant professionals support a paid and regulated system to
eliminate kidney shortage, others argue that it will be destructive.
Iran has a 20-year experience with a compensated and regulated
living unrelated kidney donation program. This transplantation
model was adopted in 1988, and successfully eliminated kidney
transplant waiting list by the end of 1999. Currently, more than
50% of patients with end-stage kidney disease in Iran are living
with a functioning graft. This Iranian transplantation model has
many ethical successes. However, because it has not been well
regulated by transplant ethicists, some ethical shortcomings have
remained. Unfortunately, due to lack of interest and expertise in
health authorities, the number of serious ethical failures is also
increasing in this transplantation model.