[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 42, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 42CFR121.8]

[Page 654-656]
 
                         TITLE 42--PUBLIC HEALTH
 
    CHAPTER I--PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN 
                                SERVICES
 
PART 121_ORGAN PROCUREMENT AND TRANSPLANTATION NETWORK--
Table of Contents
 
Sec. 121.8  Allocation of organs.

    (a) Policy development. The Board of Directors established under 
Sec. 121.3 shall develop, in accordance with the policy development 
process described in Sec. 121.4, policies for the equitable allocation 
of cadaveric organs among potential recipients. Such allocation 
policies:
    (1) Shall be based on sound medical judgment;
    (2) Shall seek to achieve the best use of donated organs;
    (3) Shall preserve the ability of a transplant program to decline an 
offer of an organ or not to use the organ for the potential recipient in 
accordance with Sec. 121.7(b)(4)(d) and (e);
    (4) Shall be specific for each organ type or combination of organ 
types to be transplanted into a transplant candidate;
    (5) Shall be designed to avoid wasting organs, to avoid futile 
transplants, to promote patient access to transplantation, and to 
promote the efficient management of organ placement;
    (6) Shall be reviewed periodically and revised as appropriate;
    (7) Shall include appropriate procedures to promote and review 
compliance including, to the extent appropriate, prospective and 
retrospective reviews of each transplant program's application of the 
policies to patients listed or proposed to be listed at the program; and
    (8) Shall not be based on the candidate's place of residence or 
place of listing, except to the extent required by paragraphs (a)(1)-(5) 
of this section.
    (b) Allocation performance goals. Allocation policies shall be 
designed to achieve equitable allocation of organs among patients 
consistent with paragraph (a) of this section through the following 
performance goals:
    (1) Standardizing the criteria for determining suitable transplant 
candidates through the use of minimum criteria (expressed, to the extent 
possible, through objective and measurable medical criteria) for adding 
individuals to, and removing candidates from, organ transplant waiting 
lists;
    (2) Setting priority rankings expressed, to the extent possible, 
through objective and measurable medical criteria, for patients or 
categories of patients who are medically suitable candidates for 
transplantation to receive transplants. These rankings shall be ordered 
from most to least medically urgent (taking into account, in accordance 
with paragraph (a) of this section, and in particular in accordance with 
sound medical judgment, that life sustaining technology allows 
alternative approaches to setting priority ranking for patients). There 
shall be a sufficient number of categories (if categories are used) to 
avoid grouping together patients with substantially different medical 
urgency;

[[Page 655]]

    (3) Distributing organs over as broad a geographic area as feasible 
under paragraphs (a)(1)-(5) of this section, and in order of decreasing 
medical urgency; and
    (4) Applying appropriate performance indicators to assess transplant 
program performance under paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (c)(2)(ii) of this 
section and reducing the inter-transplant program variance to as small 
as can reasonably be achieved in any performance indicator under 
paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section as the Board determines 
appropriate, and under paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this section. If the 
performance indicator ``waiting time in status'' is used for allocation 
purposes, the OPTN shall seek to reduce the inter-transplant program 
variance in this indicator, as well as in other selected performance 
indicators, to as small as can reasonably be achieved, unless to do so 
would result in transplanting less medically urgent patients or less 
medically urgent patients within a category of patients.
    (c) Allocation performance indicators. (1) Each organ-specific 
allocation policy shall include performance indicators. These indicators 
must measure how well each policy is:
    (i) Achieving the performance goals set out in paragraph (b) of this 
section; and
    (ii) Giving patients, their families, their physicians, and others 
timely and accurate information to assess the performance of transplant 
programs.
    (2) Performance indicators shall include:
    (i) Baseline data on how closely the results of current allocation 
policies approach the performance goals established under paragraph (b) 
of this section;
    (ii) With respect to any proposed change, the amount of projected 
improvement in approaching the performance goals established under 
paragraph (b) of this section;
    (iii) Such other indicators as the Board may propose and the 
Secretary approves; and
    (iv) Such other indicators as the Secretary may require.
    (3) For each organ-specific allocation policy, the OPTN shall 
provide to the Secretary data to assist the Secretary in assessing organ 
procurement and allocation, access to transplantation, the effect of 
allocation policies on programs performing different volumes of 
transplants, and the performance of OPOs and the OPTN contractor. Such 
data shall be required on performance by organ and status category, 
including program-specific data, OPO-specific data, data by program 
size, and data aggregated by organ procurement area, OPTN region, the 
Nation as a whole, and such other geographic areas as the Secretary may 
designate. Such data shall include the following measures of inter-
transplant program variation: risk-adjusted total life-years pre-and 
post-transplant, risk-adjusted patient and graft survival rates 
following transplantation, risk-adjusted waiting time and risk-adjusted 
transplantation rates, as well as data regarding patients whose status 
or medical urgency was misclassified and patients who were 
inappropriately kept off a waiting list or retained on a waiting list. 
Such data shall cover such intervals of time, and be presented using 
confidence intervals or other measures of variance, as may be required 
to avoid spurious results or erroneous interpretation due to small 
numbers of patients covered.
    (d) Transition patient protections--(1) General. When the OPTN 
revises organ allocation policies under this section, it shall consider 
whether to adopt transition procedures that would treat people on the 
waiting list and awaiting transplantation prior to the adoption or 
effective date of the revised policies no less favorably than they would 
have been treated under the previous policies. The transition procedures 
shall be transmitted to the Secretary for review together with the 
revised allocation policies.
    (2) Special rule for initial revision of liver allocation policies. 
When the OPTN transmits to the Secretary its initial revision of the 
liver allocation policies, as directed by paragraph (e)(1) of this 
section, it shall include transition procedures that, to the extent 
feasible, treat each individual on the waiting list and awaiting 
transplantation on October 20, 1999 no less favorably than he or she 
would have been treated had the revised liver allocation policies not

[[Page 656]]

become effective. These transition procedures may be limited in duration 
or applied only to individuals with greater than average medical urgency 
if this would significantly improve administration of the list or if 
such limitations would be applied only after accommodating a substantial 
preponderance of those disadvantaged by the change in the policies.
    (e) Deadlines for initial reviews. (1) The OPTN shall conduct an 
initial review of existing allocation policies and, except as provided 
in paragraph (e)(2) of this section, no later than November 16, 2000 
shall transmit initial revised policies to meet the requirements of 
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, together with supporting 
documentation to the Secretary for review in accordance with Sec. 
121.4.
    (2) No later than March 16, 2000 the OPTN shall transmit revised 
policies and supporting documentation for liver allocation to meet the 
requirements of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section to the Secretary 
for review in accordance with Sec. 121.4. The OPTN may transmit these 
materials without seeking further public comment under Sec. 121.4(b).
    (f) Secretarial review of policies, performance indicators, and 
transition patient protections. The OPTN's transmittal to the Secretary 
of proposed allocation policies and performance indicators shall include 
such supporting material, including the results of model-based computer 
simulations, as the Secretary may require to assess the likely effects 
of policy changes and as are necessary to demonstrate that the proposed 
policies comply with the performance indicators and transition 
procedures of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.
    (g) Variances. The OPTN may develop, in accordance with Sec. 121.4, 
experimental policies that test methods of improving allocation. All 
such experimental policies shall be accompanied by a research design and 
include data collection and analysis plans. Such variances shall be time 
limited. Entities or individuals objecting to variances may appeal to 
the Secretary under the procedures of Sec. 121.4.
    (h) Directed donation. Nothing in this section shall prohibit the 
allocation of an organ to a recipient named by those authorized to make 
the donation.

[64 FR 56659, Oct. 20, 1999, as amended at 64 FR 71626, Dec. 21, 1999]