Tag: organ transplant

  • Transplant surgeries and organ donation in Romania

    Transplant surgeries and organ donation in Romania

    In the past few years, their number has dropped almost five times. Consequently, the number of transplants also decreased from several hundreds in the past years to several dozens at present. A lack of transparency in the system has been signaled, and there are suspicions of organ trafficking, of some patients being left to die in order for other patients to live. Moreover, suspicions have also been fuelled by the fact that many organ transplantations beneficiaries were rich people, while poor patients, although on the waiting list for years, stood zero chances of receiving an organ. These are apparently the reasons for a low interest in organ donation in Romania.



    More than 500 patients in need of an organ died in Romania last year alone. In 2016 Romania was the last but one in Europe in terms of number of organ donors per one million inhabitants. This year, 102 kidney transplants, 46 liver transplants, 3 lung transplants and 5 heart transplants have been performed in Romania, while Hungary has reported 60 heart transplants since the start of the year. So, the number of transplants performed in Romania is way too small given the large number of sick people, says Anca Baculea, head of the National Transplant Agency:



    Anca Baculea: “Indeed, the number of transplant surgeries has dropped significantly in the past two years, following a decrease in the number of brain dead donors. For this reason, we have had meetings with transplant coordinators and anaesthetists, who are tasked with identifying possible brain dead donors, in order to find the reasons behind this sharp decrease. Probably, one of the strongest reasons is the lack of the family’s consent for organ donation, and this may also be a consequence of the negative media reports in the previous years. This is why we’ve decided we should collaborate with the media and have professionals in the field explain the situation in TV and radio shows, raise awareness of this problem and make people understand that organ donation, under terribly difficult and painful circumstances, is a noble gesture that can save many lives.”



    In Romania, out of the total 41 medical units that hold the license for transplants, only 11 have performed such surgeries this year. Anca Baculea has voiced concern that, in spite of the fact that 160 potential donors have been identified this year, the organs of only 59 patients have been procured, with the other patients not being eligible or the family refusing to give their consent.



    Anca Baculea: “More than 5,000 patients are on a waiting list for a transplant. Around 4,000 patients are waiting for a kidney transplant, more than 500 for a liver transplant and more than 30 for a heart transplant. We have a number of potential donors, but at the moment, the real donors are 59, for whom the families have given their consent for organ procurement. Indeed, the number is very small, as compared to the previous years, when we even had as many as 130-150 donors. 59 donors is a very small number, but I can give you good news. After we got together in Cluj in those meetings, in November, we have already registered 12 donors in brain death from whom organs were taken. So, 12 patients in a month indicate that we will have a much greater number of donors and of organ transplants, respectively.”



    Healthcare specialists have urged Romanians to include their names on the Volunteer Donors Register, to give their consent while still alive, for organ procurement. So, the moment a person experiences brain death, they become donors by default, and no consent on the part of the family is needed. The National Transplant Agency has also pointed to the lack of a single list, at national level, for each organ. A solution to this problem could be provided by the new Transplant Law, soon to be examined by the Government.



    The aforementioned law also includes the reorganization of the National Transplant Agency, Anca Baculea also said: ”Right now we do not have national lists, we have transplant waiting lists for each center. At the National Transplant Agency we have the lists compiled the moment the medical doctor places the patient on the waiting list, through the National Transplant Register and a single code is ascribed to them, provided by the National Transplant Agency. This is how we can have their registered numbers. But the centers do not have a national list, as each center has certain specific criteria, according to which patients are included or not on those waiting lists. So, there’s no cohesion nationwide, and this is exactly what we want to achieve. Right now we are in the process of setting up a National Transplant Register, because we want to include in this Register another one of living donors, a Register of brain dead donors, national waiting lists, as well as a Register of transplanted patients, so that we may know exactly what their post-transplant condition is, so that they may be monitored.”



    Because we do not have enough donors, Romania is not a member of Eurotransplant, an organization based in the Netherlands, with eight member countries where the organ transplantation system functions very well. Meanwhile, the Transplant Law is expected to come into force by the end of the year. According to the new draft law, the single national register will be taken into account. Patients will be selected in keeping with the seriousness of the case, but also following ethical criteria, which means that an organ procured from a child will no longer reach an adult person, should another child need such an organ. The authorities will thus encourage people to give their consent for organ procurement from patients experiencing brain death, so that the number of transplant surgeries may increase.

  • New developments in the Romanian healthcare system

    New developments in the Romanian healthcare system

    The Romanian
    health ministry has recently announced a series of measures to improve the
    activity of a sector that has been confronted with many problems for many
    years. On Monday, it presented the main directions of the national human
    resources strategy in healthcare for the period 2014-2020. These include an
    adequate salary scheme, good working conditions and opportunities for
    professional development. The authorities are proposing measures to discourage
    the exodus of doctors in the next four years, given that Romania is faced with
    a significant shortage of specialist staff.




    The healthcare
    ministry has also launched the first nationwide electronic registry for the
    hearing screening of newborn babies. For the time being, the registry is only
    operational as part of a pilot programme implemented in three maternity
    hospitals in Bucharest, but will be implemented across the country starting
    next year. Beginning in 2017, all children born in state-run hospitals will
    have their hearing tested immediately after birth, said the healthcare minister
    Vlad Voiculescu on Tuesday:




    We have put
    together a unique protocol for the hearing testing of newborns which will be
    approved through a ministerial order. Each person undergoing a hearing test
    will be automatically included into a national electronic registry so that we
    can have a very clear record of persons with hearing problems. The outcome of
    this is that one year after the registry becomes operational, we will finally
    be able to know how many people with hearing problems we have in Romania.




    There will be
    335 hearing screening devices in Romania and procurement tenders will begin
    early next year. Of the around 200,000 new babies born every year in Romania,
    around 600 have hearing problems. The healthcare ministry also talked about its
    intention to re-introduce university education in the field of audiology.




    Minister Vlad
    Voiculescu also announced that with support from his ministry, the National
    Transport Agency would take steps in the coming period to ensure the
    transparency of the organ allocation mechanism and compliance with the legal
    provisions in place. He said the national transplant registry is working, but
    not how it should be. At the end of last month, an inquiry by the healthcare
    ministry’s control body uncovered grave irregularities and the application of
    subjective criteria in the approval and prioritising of transplant surgery in
    Romania. At the time, minister Voiculescu said Romania lacks clear procedures
    for organ allocation and national waiting lists for each organ, and that
    patients on these lists do not always benefit from equal chances, while where
    they exist, the laws are not respected.





    Also, the healthcare ministry and the National
    Health Insurance House have begun consultations with the representatives of
    doctors and patients on the functioning of the electronic health record that
    became mandatory on November 18th. As of this date, doctors must
    introduce patients’ data, including their medical history, into the information
    system of the National Health Insurance House.

  • Organ transplantation in Romania

    Organ transplantation in Romania

    400 transplants were carried out last year alone, including 275 kidney, 122 liver and a heart transplant. The liver transplant seems to be the most difficult of all transplants. Most of these organs come from brain-dead people, but in some cases the donor can be a family member. Over 400 people are on the waiting list for a liver transplant and last year saw the highest number of donors, which made possible the largest number of transplants.



    Irinel Popescu, the head of the Hepatic Transplant and Surgery Centre with the Fundeni Hospital and the man who performed the first hepatic transplant in Romania, explains:



    “2013 was a very special year in terms of donors, it was more of a leap rather than a progressive evolution. The number of hepatic transplants went from 75 in 2012 to 122 in 2013, which is absolutely remarkable. We’d like to have the same number of transplants this year as well. We’ve so far performed 41 hepatic transplants here at Fundeni Hospital and hope to equal or even slightly exceed last year’s figures. Another accomplishment is the opening of a second transplant centre at St. Mary’s Hospital, and they have already performed three operations there. At the same time we were pleased to help our colleagues in Chisinau, the Republic of Moldova, with livers coming from live donors or from brain-dead patients. I’d like to introduce to Romania other types of transplant. No lung or small intestine transplants have been performed in Romania so far and I hope these will become possible in the future as well.”



    Almost two million Romanians are suffering from hepatitis, which, if not treated, can lead to cirrhosis and hepatic cancer. The first successful hepatic transplants were performed at the Fundeni Hospital in Bucharest in 2000.



    “I was suffering from cirrhosis and needed a transplant, but no successful hepatic transplants had been performed in Romania before. But in March 2000 I was operated on by doctor Popescu and now 14 years on from my operation I feel very good, no more health problems.”



    “I am 64 years old and feel good without any health problems. I was also suffering from cirrhosis, a terminal illness. I got in touch with the transplant centre in Bucharest. I didn’t know at that time I could get a transplant in Romania and I was considering a trip abroad. However, professor Popescu assured me that Romania offered transplant conditions like any other country. There weren’t many on the waiting list at that time, but there were no donors either. They eventually got a donor, called me and I got the operation.”



    After a break of more than two years, heart transplants have resumed in Targu Mures, western Romania, and at the Floreasca Emergency Hospital in Bucharest. Since the first heart transplant in Romania in 1999, the doctors in Targu Mures have managed to perform an average of 10 transplants per year.



    At present more than 3,600 people are on the waiting lists for various transplants, while the money allotted for these types of surgery only amounts to a fifth of the needed funds. A new budget adjustment is expected this summer in the healthcare sector, but doctors argue that the personnel involved in organ transplantation are still underpaid. Here is professor Mihai Lucan, PhD, head of the kidney transplant centre in Cluj with more on this issue:



    “Romania has made huge steps in this direction although we are geographically positioned in an area where we need to approach the issue in a different manner. Last year we saw huge progress in this field as we had a higher rate of donations from people who were brain-dead, which even exceeded the rate recorded in more developed countries. There is still room for improvement, we can do it better and we can do more. “



    The Transplant and Urology Centre in Cluj, western Romania, started pancreas transplantation in 2006 and the doctors here have so far succeeded in transplanting 11 organs. Mihai Lucan explains:



    “We didn’t quite start off on the right foot as this is a very sensitive area where a lot of complications are likely to appear. We even had to perform post-operative surgery in almost all of the 11 cases, all of which were successful in the end. This year we have benefited from assistance from our colleagues in Italy and Austria and have obtained spectacular results. We perform double transplant, kidney and pancreas, and we have 30 patients on the waiting list.”



    At present Romania has 40 organ harvesting centres and there are about 20 to 25 donors per one million people in Europe every year. There are countries like Spain where there are 40 donors but Romania is far behind with 4 donors per one million people. In order to be among the countries with a high number of transplants we should have 300 donors a year, and that’s very difficult with only one liver transplant centre in Fundeni, three kidney transplant centres in Bucharest, Cluj Napoca and Iasi and two centres specialising in heart transplant in Targu-Mures.