486.344—Condition: Evaluation and management of potential donors and organ placement and recovery.
The OPO must have written protocols for donor evaluation and management and organ placement and recovery that meet current standards of practice and are designed to maximize organ quality and optimize the number of donors and the number of organs recovered and transplanted per donor.
(a) Potential donor protocol management.
(1)
The medical director is responsible for ensuring that potential donor evaluation and management protocols are implemented correctly and appropriately to ensure that potential donors are thoroughly assessed for medical suitability for organ donation and clinically managed to optimize organ viability and function.
(2)
The OPO must implement a system that ensures that a qualified physician or other qualified individual is available to assist in the medical management of a potential donor when the surgeon on call is unavailable.
(1)
Arrange for screening and testing of the potential donor for infectious disease according to current standards of practice, including testing for the human immunodeficiency virus.
(2)
Ensure that screening and testing of the potential donor (including point-of-care testing and blood typing) are conducted by a laboratory that is certified in the appropriate specialty or subspecialty of service in accordance with part 493 of this chapter.
(4)
Document potential donor's record with all test results, including blood type, before organ recovery.
(d) Standard: Collaboration with transplant programs.
(1)
The OPO must establish protocols in collaboration with transplant programs that define the roles and responsibilities of the OPO and the transplant program for all activities associated with the evaluation and management of potential donors, organ recovery, and organ placement, including donation after cardiac death, if the OPO has implemented a protocol for donation after cardiac death.
(ii)
If the identify of the intended recipient is known, the OPO has a procedure to ensure that prior to organ recovery, an individual from the OPO's staff compares the blood type of the donor with the blood type of the intended recipient, and the accuracy of the comparison is verified by a different individual;
(iii)
Documentation of the donor's blood type accompanies the organ to the hospital where the transplant will take place.
(3)
The established protocols must be reviewed regularly with the transplant programs to incorporate practices that have been shown to maximize organ donation and transplantation.
(e) Documentation of recipient information.
If the intended recipient has been identified prior to recovery of an organ for transplantation, the OPO must have written documentation from the OPTN showing, at a minimum, the intended organ recipient's ranking in relation to other suitable candidates and the recipient's OPTN identification number and blood type.
(f) Donation after cardiac death.
If an OPO recovers organs from donors after cardiac death, the OPO must have protocols that address the following:
(2)
Withdrawal of support, including the relationship between the time of consent to donation and the withdrawal of support;
(g) Organ allocation.
The OPO must have a system to allocate donated organs among transplant patients that is consistent with the rules and requirements of the OPTN, as defined in § 486.320 of this part.
(h) Organ placement.
The OPO must develop and implement a protocol to maximize placement of organs for transplantation.