Friday, May 29, 2026

THE ORGAN — IV · The Discard

The Organ · Post IV · The Discard
Trium Publishing House
Forensic System Architecture
thegipster.blogspot.com
Est. 2026 · Pennsylvania
The Organ
Post IV of VIII
ORG-POST-IV  ·  DISCARD-ANALYSIS  ·  CONVERSION LAYER

The Discard

The Organs That Could Have Saved Lives — and Didn't

Between 20 and 29 percent of recovered deceased-donor kidneys are discarded rather than transplanted. Not lost in transit. Not medically unusable. Discarded — after recovery, after preservation, after offer — because no transplant center accepted them in time. The discard is not a failure of supply. It is a failure of the architecture that governs what happens to the supply after it arrives.

Recovered annually · Deceased donor kidneys
~25,000
Enter the offer chain
Discarded · Not transplanted
~5,000–7,000
20–29% of recovered · Post-recovery failure
Transplanted · Waitlist patients served
~19,000–21,000
Against 85,000+ on waitlist
01 The Mechanics of Discard

When an OPO recovers a kidney from a deceased donor, the organ enters the allocation system. The UNOS algorithm generates a ranked list of potential recipients — patients whose blood type, HLA compatibility, geographic location, and medical scores make them candidates for this particular organ. The list is offered sequentially: the transplant center caring for the top-ranked patient receives the offer first. The center reviews the organ's characteristics — age, medical history, KDPI score, biopsy results if taken — and accepts or declines.

If the center declines, the offer moves to the next center on the list. And the next. And the next. Each declination takes time — hours, in many cases — during which the organ is in preservation solution, accumulating cold ischemia time. Each additional hour of cold ischemia degrades the organ's viability and reduces its likelihood of functioning well after transplant. By the time an organ has worked through twenty or thirty declinations, it may have accumulated enough ischemia time that the centers near the bottom of the list face a choice between a marginal organ and no organ. Some accept. Some decline. Some organs expire before a willing center is reached.

This is the offer chain. It is the mechanism through which a recovered organ can become a discarded organ — not through any single malicious or negligent decision, but through the sequential accumulation of individually rational declinations that collectively produce an irrational outcome.

A recovered kidney that no center accepts is not a failed organ. It is a failure of the system that governs the offer. The organ was viable when it left the donor. It became unviable in transit through the architecture.

Offer Chain Simulation · High-KDPI Kidney · Illustrative Composite ORG-POST-IV · DC-01 · Composite
Organ Reference
KID-2024-XXXX · Deceased Donor · KDPI 84
Recovery Time
00:00
Viable Window
~24–36 hrs
Donor Age
62 yrs · HTN · DM
#
Center
Stated Reason
Cold Ischemia
Decision
01
Regional Center A
KDPI too high for current recipient panel. No suitable match.
+0:45 hrs
Decline
02
University Center B
Biopsy result pending. Center policy: no acceptance without biopsy review.
+2:10 hrs
Decline
03
Community Hospital C
Recipient unavailable — admitted for infection. Center declines.
+4:20 hrs
Decline
04
Regional Center D
Biopsy shows 22% glomerulosclerosis. Center quality threshold exceeded.
+7:05 hrs
Decline
07
Academic Center E
Accumulated ischemia time now 11+ hours. Center policy: max 12 hrs for KDPI 80+.
+11:30 hrs
Decline
12
Center F · G · H
No response within offer window / logistics / no available surgical team.
+16:45 hrs
Decline ×3
ORGAN EXPIRED
Viability window closed. No center accepted. Organ discarded.
+28:00 hrs
Discarded
OUTCOME: Organ discarded after 28 hours · 12+ centers declined · patient on waitlist did not receive transplant
Offers made
12+
Accepted
0
Viable at recovery
Yes

The composite offer chain above is not exceptional. Senate investigators and academic researchers have documented cases involving dozens of offer declinations before a kidney is accepted or discarded. Each declination has a documented reason — most of them individually defensible. The aggregate outcome is indefensible: a viable organ recovered from a donor whose family consented to donation is destroyed because the architecture through which it was offered is not designed to prevent that outcome.

02 The KDPI Problem

The Kidney Donor Profile Index, introduced in 2014, scores donor kidneys on a scale of 1 to 100 — low scores indicating lower-risk, higher-quality kidneys; high scores indicating older donors with more comorbidities. The system was designed to improve allocation efficiency by matching kidney quality to recipient prognosis. Low-KDPI kidneys would go to recipients with the best expected long-term outcomes; high-KDPI kidneys would be more broadly available.

In practice, KDPI has become the primary driver of discard. Acceptance rates for kidneys fall sharply as KDPI rises — not because the medical evidence supports wholesale rejection of high-KDPI kidneys, but because the score provides transplant centers with a legible shortcut for a decision that is, in reality, much more nuanced. A KDPI of 85 does not mean the kidney is not worth transplanting. For many dialysis patients, a KDPI 85 kidney transplant is still significantly better than continued dialysis. But the score reads as high risk, and high risk interacts with center outcome metrics in a way that makes declination rational from the center's perspective even when acceptance would be better for the patient.

KDPI Score vs. Offer Acceptance Rate · Documented Pattern ORG-POST-IV · KDPI-01
KDPI 0–20
Very high acceptance · Best-quality kidneys
~88%
KDPI 21–40
High acceptance
~80%
KDPI 41–60
Moderate acceptance · Declining
~65%
KDPI 61–80
Low acceptance · Risk aversion increases
~40%
KDPI 81–100
Very low acceptance · High discard risk
~20%
Pattern based on OPTN data. High-KDPI kidney transplant is superior to dialysis continuation for most ESRD patients. The acceptance cliff at KDPI 60+ reflects center behavior, not patient outcomes data.
03 The Incentive Architecture

The discard problem is, at its core, an incentive problem. Transplant centers are publicly evaluated on their one-year patient and graft survival rates. These metrics are reported on the SRTR website, reviewed by CMS, and used by patients choosing centers. A center that accepts marginal organs — high-KDPI kidneys, older livers, organs from donors with complex medical histories — will have lower reported survival rates than a center that declines the same organs. The center with lower reported rates risks regulatory review, adverse publicity, and patient selection shifts.

The rational center strategy — rational from the perspective of institutional self-protection — is to be selective. Accept the clean, low-risk organs. Decline the marginal ones. Let another center deal with the offer chain. If no center accepts, the organ is discarded. The discard does not appear in any center's outcome metrics. The patient on the waitlist who might have received that organ dies on dialysis. That death also does not appear in any center's outcome metrics, because the patient was never that center's patient.

Center Incentive Architecture · Accept vs. Decline Decision Matrix ORG-POST-IV · INC-01
Scenario
Center Metrics Impact
Patient Outcome
Accept high-KDPI kidney → transplant succeeds
Positive: transplant added to volume. Good survival outcome improves metrics.
Best outcome. Patient receives functioning kidney. Off dialysis.
Accept high-KDPI kidney → graft fails within 1 year
Negative: graft failure appears in 1-year survival metrics. Center may face regulatory scrutiny. Reputation risk.
Poor outcome for patient. However: patient was on dialysis before. Return to dialysis, not a new harm from patient's baseline.
Decline high-KDPI kidney → organ discarded
No impact. Declination is invisible in metrics. Center's reported rates unaffected.
Patient remains on dialysis. May die waiting. Death does not appear in this center's data. Invisible harm.
Decline high-KDPI kidney → another center accepts → succeeds
No impact on declining center. Metrics unaffected.
Patient receives kidney at another center. Good outcome — but declining center receives no credit or penalty for either action.

The matrix reveals the perversity precisely. From a center's institutional perspective, the dominant strategy is conservative acceptance — take clean organs, decline marginal ones. Graft failures hurt you. Declinations don't. Patient deaths while waiting don't appear in your data at all. The system measures what happens to the patients you treat, not what happens to the patients you declined to treat. The patients who die in the gap are statistically invisible.

04 Transplant vs. Dialysis — What the Evidence Shows

The center incentive architecture is not aligned with what the clinical evidence actually shows about high-KDPI kidneys. Multiple studies have found that for most end-stage renal disease patients, transplanting a high-KDPI kidney — even one that will not function as long as a low-KDPI kidney — is superior to remaining on dialysis, measured by both life expectancy and quality of life. A KDPI 85 kidney that functions for five years gives a patient five years off dialysis. That five years is likely to extend their overall survival relative to five years on dialysis, even if the kidney eventually fails.

Clinical Evidence · High-KDPI Transplant
Superior to Dialysis for Most Patients
Studies show KDPI 85+ kidney transplant extends life expectancy and improves quality of life relative to dialysis continuation for most ESRD patients — even accounting for graft failure risk and re-listing. Years off dialysis reduce cardiovascular burden, infection risk, and overall mortality. The clinical case for accepting high-KDPI organs is stronger than center behavior reflects.
Center Behavior · Actual Practice
Systematic Underacceptance
Centers systematically decline high-KDPI organs at rates the clinical evidence does not justify. Risk aversion driven by outcome reporting metrics, not patient welfare calculus. Biopsy protocols add ischemia time and generate additional grounds for declination. The gap between what the evidence supports and what centers do is measurable — and the gap is filled with discarded organs and dialysis patients who could have been transplanted.
05 The Biopsy Problem

Punch biopsies of donor kidneys — a procedure in which a core of kidney tissue is removed and analyzed for the degree of fibrosis, glomerulosclerosis, and other signs of chronic damage — are performed on a significant proportion of recovered kidneys, particularly higher-KDPI organs. The stated purpose is to provide centers with additional information about organ quality. The operational effect, in many cases, is to add cold ischemia time and generate an additional reason to decline.

Biopsy results are interpreted by pathologists, and the interpretation is not standardized. The same biopsy result may lead one center to accept and another to decline. The procedure takes time — hours, in some cases — during which the organ is accumulating ischemia. And the predictive value of kidney biopsies for post-transplant outcomes is, in the research literature, contested: biopsies have shown limited ability to predict whether a kidney will function well after transplant. Yet their use is widespread, and their results are used as grounds for declination in offer chains that are already accumulating ischemia with each passing hour.

27%
Discard Rate
Approximate proportion of recovered deceased-donor kidneys discarded in recent years — among the highest of any developed country
5–28k
Viable Discards
Range of estimates for additional viable kidneys discarded annually that could have been transplanted — the figure varies by methodology and assumption
0
Center Penalty
Effect on a center's reported metrics from declining an organ that is subsequently discarded. Patient deaths while waiting are invisible in center outcome data.
2014
KDPI Introduced
Year the Kidney Donor Profile Index was introduced — intended to improve allocation efficiency, now documented as a primary driver of high-KDPI organ declination and discard
06 What the Discard Tells Us

The discard rate is the single most damning number in the organ transplant system. It is not the number of patients who die on the waitlist — those deaths can be attributed to scarcity, to the gap between donors and recipients that no allocation system can fully close. The discard rate is the number of organs that were recovered — that families consented to donate, that OPOs retrieved, that entered the allocation system as viable — and were not used.

Every discarded kidney represents at least one family that said yes at the worst moment of their lives and whose consent produced nothing. It represents at least one patient on the waitlist who was not transplanted that day. It represents the system's failure to convert the supply it already had into the outcome it exists to produce.

The discard is not primarily a medical failure. It is an architectural one. The incentive structure rewards center selectivity. The scoring system amplifies risk aversion. The offer chain accumulates ischemia time with every declination. The biopsy protocol adds uncertainty and delay. The system was not designed to minimize discard. It was designed to maximize center autonomy — and center autonomy, when exercised through the lens of institutional self-protection rather than patient welfare, produces a discard rate that peer countries do not approach.

FSA Note · Conversion Layer

The discard is where the conversion layer — the process that takes a recovered organ and produces a transplant — fails most visibly. The algorithm generates the offer list. The centers execute the accept/decline decisions. The accumulating ischemia is the clock that cannot be stopped. Each of these elements is separately governed and separately optimized: the algorithm by UNOS policy, the center decisions by institutional metrics, the ischemia clock by logistics infrastructure. No single actor is responsible for the aggregate discard rate. The architecture is designed so that no single actor can be. The invisible patient — the one who dies on dialysis because a viable organ traveled through 15 declinations and expired — has no representation in any of the metrics that govern any of the decisions that produced their outcome. They are the system's most complete blind spot.


Next · Post V · The Board — Who governed UNOS. Transplant professionals self-regulating. Member fees funding the regulator. The conflict of interest as structural feature.

THE ORGAN — III · The Regional Monopoly

The Organ · Post III · The Regional Monopoly
Trium Publishing House
Forensic System Architecture
thegipster.blogspot.com
Est. 2026 · Pennsylvania
The Organ
Post III of VIII
ORG-POST-III  ·  OPO-TERRITORY  ·  CONDUIT LAYER

The Regional
Monopoly

57 Territories · No Competition · No Decertification · No Consequence

Each of the 57 Organ Procurement Organizations holds exclusive procurement rights in its designated service area. The best OPOs convert more than half of all potential donors. The worst convert fewer than one in four. For most of the system's history, the consequence of that gap was the same for both: the contract continued, the territory held, the monopoly was maintained. The procurement gap is not a performance failure. It is an architectural feature.

OPO Territory Assignment · Federal Grant · HRSA / CMS ORG-POST-III · TERRITORY-REF-01
Total OPOs
57
Territory Type
Exclusive · Regional monopoly
Decertified (pre-2022)
0 — None
Funding
Medicare reimbursement · primary
Performance Metrics
First objective metrics: 2020 CMS rule
01 The Franchise Architecture

An Organ Procurement Organization is not a government agency. It is a nonprofit organization — in most cases, a hospital-affiliated or independent nonprofit — that holds a federally granted exclusive territory for organ procurement. Within its designated service area, it is the only organization authorized to approach potential donor families, coordinate with hospital death-and-dying teams, recover organs from deceased donors, and arrange transportation to transplant centers. No other organization may perform these functions within its territory. The territory is exclusive. The grant is renewable. Competition is structurally excluded by federal design.

This architecture was not accidental. The OPO territorial model was established under the National Organ Transplant Act framework because organ procurement requires sustained relationships with hospital staff, consistent protocols for brain death determination, and round-the-clock logistics infrastructure — capabilities that require organizational investment and institutional presence. A competitive procurement market, the theory ran, would destabilize these relationships and introduce inconsistency into time-critical processes.

The theory was reasonable. The consequence was a franchise system in which performance could diverge enormously between OPOs without triggering the competitive discipline that would normally force poor performers out of the market. The best OPOs in the country recover organs from more than half of all medically eligible potential donors. The worst recover from fewer than one in four. For most of the system's history, both continued operating their exclusive territories.

In any other industry, a performer that converts one in four potential customers while its competitor converts one in two would lose market share. In the OPO system, both held their territories. The exclusive grant protected the underperformer as effectively as it protected the high performer. The monopoly was indifferent to what it monopolized.

57
OPO Territories
Each exclusive, each federally granted, each renewed without competitive bidding under the pre-2023 framework
0
Decertified Pre-2022
Number of OPOs fully decertified for underperformance in the 34 years between NOTA's passage and the 2020 CMS metrics reform
Performance Range
Ratio between best and worst OPO conversion rates — best recover 50%+ of potential donors; worst recover fewer than 25%
2020
First Metrics
Year CMS established the first objective, outcome-based performance metrics for OPOs — 34 years after the system began operating
02 The Procurement Gap

The procurement gap is the difference between the number of medically eligible potential donors — patients who die under clinical circumstances in which donation is possible — and the number of actual recovered donors. This gap is the most direct measure of OPO performance, and it varies enormously across the 57 territories.

The gap exists for multiple reasons. Some are structural: not every family that is approached consents, and consent cannot be compelled. Some are logistical: organs have narrow viability windows, and recovery requires rapid coordination across hospitals, OPO staff, and transplant centers. Some are cultural: different communities have different rates of pre-registered donors, different relationships to organ donation, different levels of trust in the healthcare system.

But a significant portion of the gap is operational — attributable to the quality of the OPO's approach to potential donor families, the proactiveness of its hospital relationship management, the adequacy of its staffing and coverage protocols, and the effectiveness of its logistics. High-performing OPOs demonstrate that the gap can be substantially closed through investment, professionalization, and sustained community engagement. Low-performing OPOs demonstrate what happens when those investments are not made — or when the operational culture has settled into the complacency that monopoly protection enables.

Procurement Gap · Potential Donors vs. Actual Recovery · OPO Performance Range ORG-POST-III · PG-01 · Illustrative
OPO Profile
Potential Donors → Actual Recovery
Conversion
High Performer
Recovered
Gap
58%+
Above Average
Recovered
~46%
National Average
Recovered
~38%
Below Average
Recovered
~28%
Low Performer
Recovered
78% of potential donors not recovered
<25%
Schematic illustrating documented OPO performance variation. If all OPOs performed at the level of the top quartile, estimates suggest 5,000–8,000+ additional organs could be recovered annually. Gap is operational, not purely structural.

Independent analyses — including research published by academic transplant economists and reviewed by the Senate Finance Committee — estimated that if all OPOs performed at the level of the top-quartile performers, the number of organs recovered annually could increase by 5,000 to 8,000 or more. Against a background daily death toll of 30 patients on the waitlist, that figure is not abstract. It represents a substantial portion of the preventable deaths the system produces each year.

03 The Performance Grid

The 57 OPOs are not uniformly distributed across the performance range. Some territories — generally those with well-resourced organizations, strong hospital partnerships, and sustained investment in community trust-building — consistently perform near the top of the national range. Others have operated for years with documented underperformance and no competitive consequence. The grid below is a schematic illustration of the performance distribution as of the 2020–2024 CMS metrics data.

OPO Performance Distribution · 57 Territories · CMS Metrics Schematic ORG-POST-III · PERF-01 · Schematic
High performer (top quartile)
Above average
Below average
Underperformer / decertification risk
Illustrative · Based on documented performance distribution pattern
04 The Tissue Economy

The OPO system's financial architecture contains a hidden revenue driver that is rarely examined in public discussion of transplant reform: tissue procurement. Solid organ recovery — kidneys, livers, hearts, lungs — is the public face of OPO work and the activity most directly tied to lives saved on the transplant waitlist. Tissue recovery — bones, skin, tendons, corneas, heart valves — is largely invisible but substantially more lucrative, with looser oversight and higher processing margins.

Public-Facing Activity
Solid Organ Recovery
Kidneys, livers, hearts, lungs, pancreases. Time-critical. High coordination demands. Directly saves lives on the OPTN waitlist. Medicare reimburses per organ recovered and transplanted. Subject to OPTN oversight, performance metrics, and public outcome data. The activity the system is publicly designed around.

Revenue per organ: Medicare rates, regulated. Significant but limited. High operational cost. Subject to CMS performance review and potential decertification since 2020.
Hidden Revenue Driver
Tissue Procurement
Bones, tendons, skin, corneas, heart valves, veins. Processed and distributed by tissue banks. Can be recovered from donors not eligible for solid organ donation. Processing and distribution generate substantial revenue.

Revenue per donor: Significantly higher than solid organ. Processing margins on tissue can run into tens of thousands per donor. Oversight is substantially lighter — FDA regulates tissue banks but scrutiny is lower than OPTN solid organ oversight. Senate investigations have flagged financial incentives creating pressure toward tissue over solid organ focus in some OPOs.

The tissue economy creates misaligned incentives at a structural level. An OPO staff member approaching a family in an ICU is carrying both the organization's public mission — to recover organs for the waitlist — and its financial incentives — which may favor tissue recovery for its processing revenue. These incentives are not always aligned. Senate Finance Committee investigations identified OPOs where high executive compensation, lobbying spending, and entertainment expenses occurred alongside documented underperformance in solid organ recovery. The financial structure of the organization was not optimized for the public health outcome it existed to serve.

OPO / UNOS Executive Compensation · Congressional Record · IRS 990 Data ORG-POST-III · COMP-01
Organization Type
Context
CEO / Top Exec Range
UNOS (OPTN Contractor)
Federal contractor operating the national organ matching system. Nonprofit. Revenue ~$80M+ annually from member fees and federal contract.
~$650,000+
Large OPOs
Major metropolitan or multi-state territories. High donor volume. Medicare-funded. Some with tissue bank revenue streams substantially exceeding solid organ revenue.
$450,000–$900,000+
Mid-size OPOs
Regional organizations. Variable performance. Some documented by Senate investigators for high executive pay concurrent with below-average donation rates.
$300,000–$500,000
Congressional Context
Senate Finance Committee (Wyden/Grassley) investigations documented lobbying expenditures spiking when decertification reforms threatened. Entertainment and perk spending at organizations with documented underperformance.
Flagged · 2019–2022
05 The Reform Moment — and Its Limits

The 2020 CMS rule establishing objective OPO performance metrics was the most significant reform to the OPO system since NOTA. For the first time, OPOs would be evaluated against measurable outcomes — donation rates and transplant rates — rather than self-reported data and process compliance. OPOs falling below threshold would face recertification review. The worst performers could, in principle, be decertified and their territories opened to competition or consolidated with better performers.

The rule triggered a predictable industry response: OPO trade associations lobbied against it, argued the metrics disadvantaged large OPOs, disputed the methodology, and sought delays. Some of these arguments had technical merit. The metrics created perverse incentives in certain edge cases. But the fundamental resistance was to the principle of accountability itself — to the idea that a monopoly operating with public funds to serve a public health mission could be measured against its own stated purpose and found wanting.

Pre-2020 · 34 Years
No Objective Metrics
Accountability Standard Process compliance, self-reporting, peer review by transplant professional community with shared interests in system stability.
Decertification Mechanism Existed in theory. Never applied to any OPO for poor solid organ performance in 34 years of operation.
Performance Consequence None. High and low performers held their exclusive territories regardless of outcome differential.
Public Data Access Limited. UNOS data was controlled by UNOS. Independent analysis difficult. Performance variation documented by researchers, not by the system itself.
Post-2020 · Reform Framework
Outcome-Based Metrics
Accountability Standard Objective donation and transplant rates benchmarked against eligible donor population. Tiered review — Tier 1 (poor), Tier 2 (improving), Tier 3 (meeting standards).
Decertification Mechanism Operative for first time. 2026 data cycle expected to trigger review for multiple OPOs. First actual decertifications in system history possible.
Performance Consequence Decertification, territory reallocation, or competitive rebid. Structural for the first time. Implementation still unfolding.
Public Data Access Improved. CMS performance data public. OPTN modernization aims for dashboard transparency. Full independence from UNOS data control not yet achieved.

As of 2025 and 2026, the reform framework is in its first operational cycle. The 2026 data evaluation period is expected to place a significant number of OPOs — estimates have ranged from a quarter to nearly half — in Tier 1 status, triggering decertification review. Whether the system will follow through on actual decertifications, what happens to territories when OPOs lose them, and whether the competitive replacement model produces better outcomes or simply different monopolists are the open questions the next phase will answer.

FSA Note · Conduit Layer

The OPO is the conduit layer of the organ transplant system — the infrastructure through which the source (deceased donor) is connected to the conversion (transplant). Like all conduit layers in FSA architecture, it has its own financial logic that is not identical to the logic of the system it serves. The OPO is paid per organ recovered. Its executive compensation is tied to organizational revenue. Its territory is protected from competition. Its tissue revenue exceeds its solid organ revenue in some cases. None of these features are designed to produce maximum procurement of solid organs for transplant. They are designed to produce a viable nonprofit organization that also, incidentally, recovers organs. The insulation is the nonprofit designation — which implies mission alignment that the financial structure does not always provide.


Next · Post IV · The Discard — 20–29% kidney discard rates. Risk aversion as rational transplant center behavior. The algorithm's role in waste. The organs that could have saved lives and didn't.

THE ORGAN — II · The List —

The Organ · Post II · The List
Trium Publishing House
Forensic System Architecture
thegipster.blogspot.com
Est. 2026 · Pennsylvania
The Organ
Post II of VIII
ORG-POST-II  ·  OPTN-WAITLIST  ·  QUEUE ARCHITECTURE

The List

100,000 Patients · 30 Deaths Per Day · The Managed Queue

The transplant waitlist is not a line. It is an algorithm — a ranked, scored, geographically bounded queue whose outputs are determined by policy decisions UNOS made, that embedded inequity by race and zip code, and that produced a daily death toll that was not random but predictable. The people on the list did not die waiting. They died inside the architecture.

OPTN Waitlist Status · Active Queue · 2025–2026 UPDATED CONTINUOUSLY · SOURCE: OPTN DATA
103k+
Active candidates
on waitlist
~30
Deaths per day
historical rate
~10
Removed daily —
too sick to transplant
49k+
Transplants
performed 2024–2025
01 What the List Is

The public image of the organ waitlist is a queue — a line of patients waiting their turn, advancing as organs become available, with the sickest and most urgent patients moving to the front. This image is not wrong in every detail. Urgency and medical need are real factors in allocation. But it misses the most important structural feature of the list: it is not a neutral system for managing scarcity. It is an architecture, and its architecture encodes values.

The waitlist is managed through a set of scoring systems — MELD for liver, KDPI and EPTS for kidney, UNOS-developed criteria for heart and lung — that translate a patient's medical condition, time waiting, location, blood type, and sensitization status into a ranked position relative to available organs. These scores determine who receives an offer when an organ becomes available. The scores are not objective. They are policy — value judgments expressed in mathematical form, developed by committees whose membership has historically reflected the transplant professional community more than the patient community.

And the scores interact with geography in a way that produces outcomes most patients on the list do not understand when they are listed: where you live determines, in large part, how long you wait — not because organs are more or less available in different places, but because UNOS's allocation policy for most of its history distributed organs within geographic boundaries that produced enormous regional disparities in waiting time.

The waiting list does not kill people. The gap between being on the list and receiving an organ kills people. That gap is not random. It is the measurable output of allocation policy — policy that a private nonprofit set, governed, and defended for 37 years.

OPTN Waitlist Composition · By Organ · Active Candidates ORG-POST-II · WL-01
Kidney
~85,000+
~83% of total waitlist
83%
Liver
~9,500
9%
Heart
~3,500
3%
Lung
~1,000
1%
Other
~3,000
~4%

The kidney dominance of the waitlist is the central fact of organ allocation in America. Kidney disease is a condition of scale — approximately 800,000 Americans have end-stage renal disease, many more have chronic kidney disease progressing toward it. The waitlist is predominantly a kidney crisis, and the allocation policies, discard rates, and performance failures that this series documents disproportionately affect kidney patients. The gap between the number of patients who need kidneys and the number of kidneys transplanted each year is where most of the daily death toll lives.

02 The Geographic Lottery

For most of UNOS's tenure, the allocation policy for kidneys prioritized local and regional placement over national distribution. Organs were first offered within the donor's local area, then to the region, then nationally. The policy was designed to reduce cold ischemia time — the period between organ recovery and transplant during which the organ deteriorates. Keeping organs local reduced travel time and improved outcomes, the theory ran.

The problem was that the supply of deceased donors and the density of patients on the waitlist are not evenly distributed across the country. In regions where donor rates are high and patient populations are smaller — parts of the Midwest, for example — waiting times could be measured in months. In regions where patient density is high and donor rates are lower — the Northeast and West Coast urban centers — the same patient might wait five, seven, or ten years. Not because they were less sick, not because their need was less urgent, but because of their zip code. The allocation policy converted geography into survival probability.

Kidney Waitlist · Geographic Disparity · Median Wait Time by Region (Illustrative) ORG-POST-II · GEO-01 · Schematic
UNOS Region
Median Wait · Relative Scale
Est. Years
Northeast Corridor
High patient density · Low donor rate
7–10 yrs
West Coast Urban
California demand pressure
6–9 yrs
Southeast
Mixed regional supply
3–5 yrs
Mid-Atlantic
3–4 yrs
Midwest / Plains
1–2 yrs
Mountain / Rural West
1–2 yrs
Schematic · Illustrative of documented OPTN regional disparity pattern. Broader sharing policies post-2020 have reduced but not eliminated geographic disparity. Pattern reflects pre-reform allocation under UNOS regional priority rules.

The geographic lottery was not invisible. It was documented in GAO reports, academic literature, and patient advocacy campaigns. UNOS defended regional priority on medical grounds — cold ischemia time, logistics, outcomes data. Critics argued that the medical rationale was used to protect local transplant center volumes and regional OPO performance metrics, not to optimize patient outcomes nationally. Both arguments had evidentiary support. The structural result — that where you lived determined how long you waited — was not disputed.

03 The Racial Architecture

The racial disparities in organ transplant access are among the most thoroughly documented inequities in American medicine. They operate at every stage of the access funnel — from diagnosis to referral to evaluation to listing to offer acceptance to post-transplant outcomes — and they compound. A Black patient is less likely to be referred for transplant evaluation than a white patient with the same diagnosis. Less likely to be evaluated and listed. Once listed, likely to wait longer. The disadvantage is not localized to a single policy decision. It is distributed across the system's architecture.

Structural Factor
HLA Sensitization and Matching
The HLA matching system — which scores compatibility between donor and recipient immune markers — historically disadvantaged Black patients because the reference population for HLA matching was predominantly white. Black patients are more likely to be "highly sensitized," meaning they have antibodies that react to many potential donors, dramatically reducing the pool of compatible organs. This is not algorithmic intent. It is algorithmic consequence — a policy built on a non-representative reference population that produces disparate outcomes at scale.
Access Factor
Pre-Listing Attrition
Documented disparities in referral rates, evaluation completion, and listing mean that Black patients with kidney disease are less likely to reach the waitlist than white patients with equivalent diagnoses. The algorithm's racial disparities begin before the algorithm runs — in the clinical interactions, institutional practices, and socioeconomic barriers that determine who reaches the point of evaluation. The list's inequity is the downstream output of a healthcare system's upstream inequities, concentrated at the moment of allocation.
04 The Scoring Systems

The allocation scores that determine position on the waitlist are not neutral algorithms. They are value choices encoded in mathematics — choices about what matters, which factors to weight, which outcomes to optimize. They were developed over decades by committees whose composition reflected the transplant professional community, and they embed assumptions about what "fair" allocation looks like that are contestable.

Allocation Scoring Systems · Embedded Assumptions and Documented Disparities ORG-POST-II · SCORE-01
System
Design Intent
Embedded Assumptions / Disparity
MELD
Model for End-Stage Liver Disease. Scores liver patients by medical urgency — lab values (bilirubin, creatinine, INR). Replaced the prior system that used subjective assessments. Intended to remove geographic and center bias.
Creatinine component systematically underestimates kidney dysfunction in women, producing lower MELD scores for women with equivalent illness severity. Wait-listed women have higher pre-transplant mortality than men at equivalent MELD scores. Documented Gender Bias
KDPI
Kidney Donor Profile Index. Scores the quality of a donor kidney — incorporating age, diabetes, hypertension, cause of death, creatinine. Predicts relative risk of graft failure. Used by centers to decide whether to accept organ offers.
High KDPI kidneys (older, higher risk) have dramatically higher decline rates despite evidence that transplanting many is superior to dialysis. Risk-aversion at transplant centers, driven partly by center outcome metrics, produces systematic underutilization. Supply Waste Driver
EPTS
Estimated Post-Transplant Survival. Scores kidney recipients on expected graft longevity — using age, time on dialysis, diabetes status, prior transplant history. Best kidneys (low KDPI) allocated to patients with best expected outcomes (low EPTS).
Age is the dominant EPTS variable. Younger patients systematically receive preferential access to the best kidneys. Older patients wait longer for compatible organs. Optimization for graft longevity over equity of access is a value choice, not a medical necessity. Age Equity Tension
PRA / cPRA
Panel Reactive Antibody / Calculated PRA. Measures sensitization — the degree to which a patient's immune system will reject potential donors. High cPRA patients receive priority points to compensate for their reduced compatible donor pool.
Black patients are more likely to be highly sensitized due to HLA reference population composition. Priority points partially compensate but do not fully offset the structural disadvantage embedded in the matching system's non-representative reference population. Racial Disparity — Structural
05 The Access Funnel

Being on the waitlist is not the same as being in the queue for an organ. Between the point of diagnosis and the point of transplant, there is a multi-stage access funnel — each stage a point where patients can be lost, delayed, or disadvantaged. The publicly visible number — 103,000+ on the waitlist — represents only the patients who have successfully navigated through the funnel's earlier stages. The patients who were never referred, never evaluated, or never listed are invisible in the OPTN data.

Organ Access Funnel · Kidney · From Diagnosis to Transplant ORG-POST-II · FUNNEL-01
01
ESRD Diagnosis
~800,000 Americans living with end-stage renal disease. Most managed on dialysis.
Entry point · Full population
02
Referral
Physician or nephrologist refers patient to transplant center for evaluation. Referral rates vary by race, socioeconomic status, geography, and dialysis center practice.
Significant loss — racial and socioeconomic disparities documented at this stage
03
Evaluation
Medical, psychosocial, and financial evaluation at transplant center. Patient must meet center-specific criteria — which vary — and demonstrate ability to afford post-transplant medications.
Attrition — financial criteria and center-specific standards create disparate outcomes
04
Listing
Patient added to OPTN waitlist. Geographic region and EPTS score determine access to future offers. Position on the list is now visible — but what follows depends heavily on where the patient lives.
Geographic lottery begins here · Regional disparity in waiting time
05
Organ Offer
Algorithm generates ranked offer list when a kidney becomes available. Offers are sequential — center declines result in the organ moving down the list. High-KDPI organs generate long decline chains before acceptance. Some organs expire.
Critical loss point — center risk aversion, logistics, and KDPI bias drive discard
06
Transplant
~25,000 kidney transplants performed annually against ~85,000+ on the waitlist. Approximately 13,000 patients added to the waitlist each year. The gap is structural and does not close.
~10,000+ patients die or are removed from waitlist annually before reaching transplant
06 The Deaths Are Not Random

Thirty patients dying per day on the transplant waitlist could, in one framing, be read as the tragic but inevitable consequence of organ scarcity — more patients need organs than die in circumstances where donation is possible, and the gap cannot be closed by any allocation system. This framing is partially true. The scarcity is genuine. Not every death on the waitlist is attributable to allocation failure.

But a significant portion is. The discard of recoverable kidneys — explored in Post IV — removes viable organs from the supply before they reach listed patients. The geographic disparity in waiting time means that patients in some regions die waiting for organs that would have been transplanted within months if those patients lived elsewhere. The pre-listing attrition documented in the access funnel means the waitlist number understates the true population of patients who could benefit from transplant. And the performance failures of OPOs — explored in Post III — mean that potential donors whose families are willing are not always approached or are approached ineffectively.

The 30 daily deaths are not one thing. They are many things, each of which has a structural explanation and a policy address. None of them are random. They are the predictable output of an architecture — an architecture that a private nonprofit maintained, defended, and governed without competitive challenge for 37 years.

10x
Geographic Range
Ratio between shortest and longest kidney wait times by US region under the pre-reform allocation system
35%
Lower Referral
Estimated disparity in transplant referral rates for Black patients vs. white patients with equivalent kidney disease diagnoses
0
Patient Input
Effective patient representation in the UNOS board committees that designed the scoring systems those patients were ranked by
FSA Note · The Queue

The waitlist is the most visible output of the organ transplant system's architecture, and it is the most politically durable insulation layer. The existence of a list implies a system — that the scarcity is being managed, that the allocation is ordered, that the process is fair. The list makes the deaths feel managed rather than produced. But the list is not the system. The list is the system's output. The deaths are not the cost of scarcity. They are partly the cost of the architecture — and that distinction is precisely what 37 years of single-contractor governance made difficult to name.


Next · Post III · The Regional Monopoly — 57 OPO territories, no competition, no decertification, no consequence. The procurement gap mapped.