Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Organ Donation from Deceased Donors in the United States

Author: Allison Zhu
Mentor: Aijaz Ahmed, MD
The Lawrenceville School

Abstract

Objective: Death mechanisms of deceased organ donors in the United States provide valuable information about disease trends at the population level. It was unclear how the deceased organ donor pool was impacted by the onset of the Coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic in 2020. 

Methods: Using the metrics produced by Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN) standard analytic files, we analyzed deceased donor death mechanisms between Jan 1st, 2010 to December 31st, 2020 in the US.  

Results: Deceased organ donors increased from 11,870 in 2019 to 12,588 in 2020 (6.0% increase) despite the pandemic. Over the 11-year period, deceased donors from drug-intoxication death (drug death donor, or DDD) had the largest percentage increase from 4.3% of all deceased donors in 2010 to 16.1% in 2020, while deceased donors from intracranial hemorrhage/stroke (39.6% to 25.3%), blunt trauma (22.3% to 17.2%) and gunshot wound deaths (10.0% to 7.7%) all experienced decline. Between 2019 and 2020, DDD was the only major death mechanism category that showed significant increase (from 13.5% to 16.1% of all deceased donors in 2019 and 2020, respectively). 

Conclusion: During the early COVID-19 pandemic, DDD was the only deceased donor category that showed a major increase. This was likely due to a sharp rise in national drug overdose death in the midst of economic and social disruption brought upon by the pandemic. 

Keywords: deceased organ donor, COVID-19, drug intoxication death

Introduction

In the United States, all organ procurement organizations and transplant centers report donor data to Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN), including age, sex, race, mechanism of death, as well as donor risk type.(Israni et al., 2021) The annual number of deceased donors in the United States increased 29.5% from 2010 to 2017, with deceased donors from drug-intoxication related death (DDD) being the category with highest increase.(Abara et al., 2019) With the unprecedented disruption of healthcare delivery in the United States and the acceleration in drug overdose death during the early phase of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic,(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2020) it is unknown how COVID-19 has impacted the organ transplantation operation and the makeup of the deceased donor pool.  

Methodology

Aim of the study

The aim of this study was to examine the trend and pattern of deceased organ donors by death mechanisms during the early COVID-19 pandemic.

Research Design

This was a retrospective analysis of OPTN’s Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) standard analytic files released on March 8th, 2021.

Hypothesis

The hypothesis of this study was that the deceased organ transplant donor pool was impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, deceased donors from drug intoxication death may experience a significant increase as a result of the measures taken to contain the spread of the pandemic. 

Consent and Ethical Issues

The data reported here have been supplied by United Network for Organ Sharing as the contractor for OPTN. The interpretation and reporting of these data are the responsibility of the authors and in no way should be seen as an official policy of or interpretation by the OPTN or the U.S. Government.

This study did not require ethics review board approval because the study subjects were deceased and the dataset used was completely de-identified.

Data collection procedure

Using the metrics produced by OPTN’s SRTR standard analytic files released on March 8th, 2021, we examined characteristics of deceased organ donors between Jan 1st, 2010 and December 31st, 2020.  Deceased donor counts included all donors for whom at least one organ was recovered for transplant. Mechanisms of death (asphyxiation, blunt injury, cardiovascular, drug intoxication, gunshot wound, intracranial hemorrhage (ICH)/stroke, natural causes, and seizure) were analyzed. Nationwide age-adjusted annual rates of drug intoxication-related deaths from 2010 to 2020 were obtained from National Vital Statistics System (NVSS).(Hedegaard et al., 2021; Multiple Cause of Death, 1999-2020 Request, n.d.)

Statistics

Descriptive statistics and frequencies were calculated by year to assess trends. Trend analyses were performed using R version 3.3.3 software (R project, Vienna, Austria). Graphics were created by using STATA (Stata Statistical Software: Release 17. College Station, TX). 

Results

The annual number of deceased organ donors steadily increased from 7,943  in 2010 to 10,286 in 2017, consistent with previous report by Abara et al.(Abara et al., 2019) The increase continued uninterrupted from 2019 (11,870 ) to 2020 (12,588, 6.0% increase, Figure 1A). Of the top 5 death mechanism categories: ICH/stroke remained the largest: from 3,143 (39.6% of total deceased donors) in 2010 to 3,181 (25.3%) in 2020, with trend slope for percentage of total deceased donors at -1.4% (p<0.001) (Figure1B).  Blunt trauma increased in counts from 1,770 in 2010 to 2,166 in 2020, but decreased in percentage of total from 22.3% to 17.2% (trend slope -0.6%, p<0.001). Gunshot wound similarly saw a small increase in counts from 795 to 963, while decreased in percentage from 10.0% to 7.7% of all deceased donors from 2010 to 2020 (trend slope -0.2%, p<0.001). Deceased donors from Cardiovascular disease rose from 1,047 (13.2%) to 2,465 (19.6%) during the study period (trend slope 0.6%, p<0.001). DDD led all death mechanism categories with the largest increase in both count ( 342 to 2,028) and percentage of total (4.3% to 16.1%) from 2010 to 2020 (trend slope 1.3%, p<0.001). 


Figure 1A: Death mechanisms of deceased donors, by counts.

Figure 1B: Death mechanisms of deceased donors, by percentages.

Between 2019 and 2020, DDD was the only death mechanism category that showed significant increase: from 1,604 (13.5%) in 2019 (Figure 2A) to 2,028 (16.1%) in 2020 (Figure 2B), p<0.001, while the other categories showed no statistically significant change.

Figure 2A: Pie chart of deceased donors by death mechanisms in 2019. 

Figure 2B: Pie chart of deceased donors by death mechanisms in 2020.

Percentage of DDD of all deceased donors from 2010 to 2020 was plotted against NVSS’s age-adjusted national annual drug overdose deaths in Figure 3. The two curves were nearly superimposable starting from 2015. An exponential model predicted the % DDD/national drug intoxication-related death for 2020 at 2.40% and the drug intoxication-related death for 2020 to be 80,936 in the United States, while the final statistics released by NVSS was 91,799.(Hedegaard et al., 2021; Multiple Cause of Death, 1999-2020 Request, n.d.) 


Figure 3: Percentage of DDD of all deceased donors in comparison with US age-adjusted drug overdose death from National Vital Statistics System.

Discussion

Despite the unprecedented impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the global healthcare delivery, OPTN data showed that deceased organ donors rose appropriately from 2019 to 2020, attesting to the resiliency of the organ donation and transplantation system. 

Deceased organ donors remained largely unchanged with an average of 7,486 per year prior to 2010, after which the ongoing U.S. opioid crisis has resulted in an increase in eligible organ donors from drug overdose deaths.(“Causes of Death among Deceased Donors,” n.d.) The DDD increase accelerated after 2013 when universal donor testing for Hepatitis B Virus (HBV), Hepatitis C Virus (HCV), and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) was mandated, and guidelines for categorizing increased risk donors established.(Seem et al., 2013) The passage of HOPE Act allowing organs from HIV infected donors to recipients also with HIV infection (Boxer, 2013) as well as the FDA approval of direct acting antiviral drugs to treat HCV in 2015 further boosted the usage of DDD donor organs that were otherwise deemed unusable previously. These milestone events led DDD increase by 125% between 2013 and 2016 (from 560 to 1,262, or 6.8% to 12.7% of total deceased donors). This trend, however, slowed and plateaued in 2017 (13.4%), 2018 (13.1%) and 2019 (13.5%), only to see a sharp rise in 2020 (16.1%). Given the close mirroring of DDD of the national drug intoxication death (Figure 3), the most plausible explanation for this significant increase was due to the increased mortality from drug intoxication in the year 2020, when the pandemic related economic hardship, disruption of healthcare, and loss of in-person social support resulted in increased anxiety, depression and social isolation.(Englander et al., 2020) This model projected the national drug overdose deaths at 80,936 for 2020, as compared to 74,511 in 2019. This projection was very close to the reported 81,000 drug overdose death in the one year period ending May 2020 as reported by CDC,(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2020) a record breaking number that was believed to be related to COVID-19. While comprehensive prevention strategies are being adapted to address the drug overdose epidemic in the context and aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, it remains to be seen how the drug overdose death curve will respond to these interventions, with the DDD data from OPTN (usually available in March of the following year) offering a precious 9 month-lead time for public health efforts to react prior to the NVSS data becoming available towards the end of the year. 

Conclusion

Analysis of OPTN’s deceased donor data showed that number of deceased organ donors with drug intoxication as the mechanism of death rose sharply from 2019 to 2020, reversing a trend of minimal change from 2016 to 2018, likely due to the profound impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the national drug death crisis. 

Limitations

The findings in this report are subject to the following limitations: demographic and clinical data were detailed by the annual OPTN/SRTR data report: Deceased Organ Donor (Israni et al., 2019, 2021) and hence not included in this brief communication; second, data are limited to donors from whom at least one organ was recovered and do not include persons who might have been considered for donation but from whom no organs were recovered. Therefore, the mechanism of death tally may not fully reflect all persons considered for organ donation. 

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank my family for their support and my science teacher Mrs. Shinae Park for her encouragement. 

References

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About the author

Allison Zhu

Allison is a rising Senior student at the Lawrenceville School in New Jersey. She has a strong interest in analyzing the impacts of social determinants of health at the population level. Two topics she is most interested in contributing are childhood obesity and illicit drug use in teenagers.