Table 1:
Category | Criteria |
---|---|
Donor Eligibility | |
All HIV-positive deceased donors | No evidence of invasive opportunistic complications of HIV infection. |
Pre-implant donor organ biopsy. | |
Viral load: no requirement. CD4 count: no requirement. | |
Deceased donor with known history of HIV infection and prior antiretroviral therapy (ART) | The study team must describe the anticipated post-transplant antiretroviral regimen(s) to be prescribed for the recipient and justify its conclusion that the regimen will be safe, tolerable, and effective. |
HIV-positive living donor | Well-controlled HIV infection defined as: |
• CD4+ T-cell count ≥500/µL for the 6-month period before donation | |
• HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL | |
• No evidence of invasive opportunistic complications of HIV infection | |
Pre-implant donor organ biopsy | |
Recipient Eligibility | CD4+ T-cell count ≥200/µL (kidney) |
CD4+ T-cell count ≥100 µL (liver) within 16 weeks prior to transplant and no history of opportunistic infection (OI); or ≥200 µL if history of OI is present. | |
HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL and on a stable antiretroviral regimen.* | |
No evidence of active opportunistic complications of HIV infection | |
No history of primary central nervous system (CNS) lymphoma or progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). | |
Transplant Hospital Criteria | Transplant hospital with established program for care of HIV-positive subjects |
HIV program expertise on the transplant team. | |
Experience with HIV-negative to HIV-positive organ transplantation. | |
Standard operating procedures (SOPs) and training for the organ procurement, implanting/operative, and postoperative care teams for handling HIV-infected subjects, organs, and tissues. | |
Institutional review board (IRB)-approved research protocol in HIV-positive to HIV-positive transplantation. | |
Institutional biohazard plan outlining measures to prevent and manage inadvertent exposure to and/or transmission of HIV | |
Provide each living HIV-positive donor and HIV-positive recipient with an “independent advocate”. | |
Policies and SOPs governing the necessary knowledge, experience, skills, and training for independent advocates. | |
OPOPO Responsibilities | SOPs and staff training procedures for working with deceased HIV-positive donors and their families in pertinent history taking; medical chart abstraction; the consent process; and handling blood, tissues, organs, and biospecimens. |
Biohazard plan to prevent and manage HIV exposure and/or transmission | |
Prevention of Inadvertent Transmission of HIV | Each participating Transplant Program and OPO shall develop an institutional biohazard plan for handling organs from HIV-positive donors that is designed to prevent and/or manage inadvertent transmission or exposure to HIV. |
Procedures must be in place to ensure that human cells, tissues, and cellular and tissue-based products (HCT/Ps) are not recovered from HIV-positive donors for implantation, transplantation, infusion, or transfer into a human recipient; however, HCT/Ps from a donor determined to be ineligible may be made available for nonclinical purposes. | |
Required Outcome Measures | |
Waitlist Candidates | HIV status |
CD4+ T-cell counts | |
Co-infection (hepatitis C virus [HCV], hepatitis B virus [HBV] | |
HIV viral load | |
ART resistance | |
Removal from waitlist (death or other reason) | |
Time on waitlist | |
Donors (all) | Type (Living or deceased) |
HIV status (HIV-infected [HIV-positive] new diagnosis, HIV-positive known diagnosis) | |
CD4+ T-cell count | |
Co-infection (HCV, HBV) | |
HIV viral load | |
ART resistance | |
Living Donors | Progression to renal insufficiency in kidney donors |
Progression to hepatic insufficiency in liver donors | |
Change in ART regimen as a result of organ dysfunction | |
Progression to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) | |
Failure to suppress viral replication (persistent HIV viremia) | |
Death | |
Transplant Recipients | Rejection rate (annual up to 5 years) |
Progression to AIDS | |
New OI | |
Failure to suppress viral replication (persistent HIV viremia) | |
HIV-associated organ failure | |
Malignancy | |
Graft failure | |
Mismatched ART resistance versus donor | |
Death |
Patients who are unable to tolerate ART due to organ failure or who have recently started ART may have an HIV > 50 copies/mL and still be eligible if the study team anticipates an effective antiretroviral regimen for the patient after transplantation.