99-27456. Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 202 (Wednesday, October 20, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 56650-56661]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-27456]
    
    
    
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    Part VI
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Health and Human Services
    
    
    
    
    
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    Health Resources and Services Administration
    
    
    
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    42 CFR Part 121
    
    
    
    Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 20, 1999 / 
    Rules and Regulations
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Health Resources and Services Administration
    
    42 CFR Part 121
    
    
    Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network
    
    AGENCY: Health Resources and Services Administration, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This document sets forth improvements to the final rule 
    governing the operation of the Organ Procurement and Transplantation 
    Network (OPTN), published in 1998. It reflects the advice of a panel 
    convened by the National Academy of Science's Institute of Medicine, as 
    called for in the Department's appropriation act for 1999. It also 
    reflects comments on the 1998 rule and consultation with 
    representatives of the organ transplantation community, as recommended 
    in the same legislation; and it summarizes new transplant data 
    developed in the period since enactment of the appropriations act.
    
    DATES: The final rule published on April 2, 1998, 63 FR 16296, adding 
    42 CFR part 121 with an effective date of October 1, 1998, as amended 
    on July 1, 1998, 63 FR 35847, did not take effect under section 213(a) 
    within Public Law 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681, 2681-359 through 2681-360, 
    approved October 21, 1998. The April 2, 1998 rule as amended by this 
    document, is effective on November 19, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: D.W. Chen, M.D., M.P.H., Director, 
    Division of Transplantation, Office of Special Programs, Health 
    Resources and Services Administration, 5600 Fishers Lane, Room 7C-22, 
    Rockville, MD 20857, telephone 301-443-7577.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On April 2, 1998, the Department of Health 
    and Human Services (HHS) published in the Federal Register a final rule 
    pertaining to the operation of the Organ Procurement and 
    Transplantation Network (63 FR 16296). In accordance with the National 
    Organ Transplant Act (NOTA) of 1984, as amended, the purpose of the 
    final rule is to help achieve the most equitable and medically 
    effective use of human organs that are donated in trust for 
    transplantation. Toward this end, the final rule establishes 
    performance goals intended to bring about:
    
        (1) Standardized criteria for placing patients on transplant 
    waiting lists, (2) standardized criteria for defining a patient's 
    medical status, and (3) allocation policies that make most effective 
    use of organs, especially by making them available whenever feasible to 
    the most medically urgent patients who are appropriate candidates for 
    transplantation. The final rule also sets standards for availability of 
    organ transplantation data, and it addresses the governing structure of 
    the OPTN. No provision of the final rule is intended to interfere with 
    the discretion of individual health professionals and patients in 
    medical decision-making, and the rule looks to the OPTN to design organ 
    allocation policies. At the same time, the rule defines the policy 
    oversight responsibilities of the Secretary of HHS. In concert with 
    efforts to encourage organ donation, the final rule is intended to help 
    make best use of the limited number of organs available for 
    transplantation.
        The final rule invited further comments, which have been received 
    and reviewed. In addition, the Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency 
    Supplemental Appropriations Act for 1999 delayed implementation of the 
    final rule until October 21, 1999. (This Omnibus Act, Public Law 105-
    277, at section 101(f) of Division A, enacted the Department of Labor, 
    HHS, and Education, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1999. 
    Within the latter act, section 213 included provisions related to the 
    final OPTN rule, 112 Stat. 2681, 2681-359 through 2681-360. Hereafter, 
    for ease of reference, we will refer to section 213 of the 
    Appropriation Act, or simply section 213.) Section 213 called for 
    independent review through the National Academy of Science's Institute 
    of Medicine. It also suggested development of improved information on 
    the effectiveness of the transplantation system, including center-
    specific information if possible. Finally, it suggested further 
    discussions between HHS and representatives of the transplant 
    community. Each of these areas has been addressed.
    
    I. Background
    
    A. Legislative and Regulatory History
    
        Legislative and regulatory history are outlined in the preamble to 
    the April 2, 1998, final rule. In addition to the underlying statute 
    (sections 371-376 of the Public Health Service Act, as enacted by the 
    National Organ Transplant Act of 1984, and as subsequently amended), of 
    particular importance is section 1138 of the Social Security Act, 
    enacted in 1986. This legislation requires hospitals that perform organ 
    transplants to be members of, and abide by the rules and requirements 
    of, the OPTN as a condition for participation in the Medicare and 
    Medicaid programs. This provision subjects a transplant hospital's 
    entire Medicare and Medicaid participation, and thus in reality its 
    economic survival, to OPTN policy and enforcement. A similar provision 
    in section 1138 affects funding under Medicare and Medicaid for organ 
    procurement organizations (OPOs). But authority for establishing 
    conditions of participation in Medicare and Medicaid resides with the 
    Secretary and cannot be exercised by another party without either 
    oversight authority or delegation. Thus, review and oversight authority 
    of OPTN policies by the Secretary of HHS is made even more necessary by 
    section 1138. A Federal Register notice published on December 18, 1989 
    (54 FR 51802) addressed this need by stating that no OPTN policies are 
    legally binding ``rules or requirements'' of the OPTN for purposes of 
    section 1138, unless they have been approved by the Secretary. The 
    final rule published April 2, 1998, defines the structure for such 
    review and approval, thus setting the stage for OPTN ``rules or 
    requirements'' that would be enforceable on transplant hospitals and 
    OPOs under section 1138.
        In October 1998, section 213 of the Appropriation Act delayed 
    implementation of the final rule to October 21, 1999. Section 213 
    directed that the Institute of Medicine conduct a review of the current 
    policies of the OPTN and the final rule. Section 213 also suggested 
    that the Secretary ``may conduct a series of discussions with the OPTN 
    in order to resolve issues raised by the final rule.'' In addition, 
    section 213 indicated a need for improved availability of data on 
    transplantation and transplant center performance.
    
    B. Institute of Medicine Report
    
        The Institute of Medicine (IOM) issued its report, Organ 
    Procurement and Transplantation, on July 22, 1999. The report included 
    five major recommendations. The Department has relied heavily on the 
    guidance in the IOM report in reviewing the provisions of its final 
    rule. In general, the IOM report validates the concerns that gave rise 
    to the final rule and the approaches taken in the rule:
    
        Recommendation 1: Establish Organ Allocation Areas for Livers. 
    The committee recommends that the DHHS Final Rule be implemented by 
    the establishment of Organ Allocation Areas (OAAs) for livers--each 
    serving a population base of at least 9 million people (unless such 
    an area would exceed the limits of acceptable cold ischemic time).
    
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    OAAs should generally be established through sharing arrangements 
    among organ procurement organizations to avoid disrupting effective 
    current procurement activities.
        Recommendation 2: Discontinue Use of Waiting Time as an 
    Allocation Criterion for [Liver Transplant] Patients in Statuses 2B 
    and 3. The heterogeneity and wide range of severity of illness in 
    statuses 2B and 3 make waiting time relatively misleading within 
    these categories. For this reason, waiting time should be 
    discontinued as an allocation criterion for status 2B and 3 
    patients. An appropriate medical triage system should be developed 
    to ensure equitable allocation of organs to patients in these 
    categories. Such a system may, for example, be based on a point 
    system arising out of medical characteristics and disease prognoses 
    rather than waiting times.
        Recommendation 3: Exercise Federal Oversight. The Department of 
    Health and Human Services should exercise the legitimate oversight 
    responsibilities assigned to it by the National Organ Transplant 
    Act, and articulated in the final rule, to manage the system of 
    organ procurement and transplantation in the public interest. This 
    oversight should include greater use of patient-centered, outcome-
    oriented performance measures for OPOs, transplant centers, and the 
    OPTN.
        Recommendation 4: Establish Independent Scientific Review. The 
    Department of Health and Human Services should establish an 
    external, independent, multidisciplinary scientific review board 
    responsible for assisting the Secretary in ensuring that the system 
    of organ procurement and transplantation is grounded on the best 
    available medical science and is as effective and as equitable as 
    possible.
        Recommendation 5: Improve Data Collection and Dissemination. 
    Within the bounds of donor and recipient confidentiality and sound 
    medical judgment, the OPTN contractor should improve its collection 
    of standardized and useful data regarding the system of organ 
    procurement and transplantation and make it widely available to 
    independent investigators and scientific reviewers in a timely 
    manner. The Department of Health and Human Services should provide 
    an independent, objective assessment of the quality and 
    effectiveness of the data that are collected and how they are 
    analyzed and disseminated by the OPTN.
    
        In addition, the General Accounting Office (GAO) made findings in 
    two other areas required by section 213: the possibility of legal 
    liability of OPTN members arising from their peer review activities and 
    the confidentiality of information. Regarding liability, the General 
    Counsel of the GAO found no apparent conflict between the final rule 
    and State laws governing peer review. Regarding confidentiality, the 
    General Counsel found that the Secretary of HHS has authority under the 
    final rule to decide that the public interest in disclosure of 
    information about organ transplants outweighs the interest in 
    confidentiality.
    
    C. Discussions With the Transplant Community
    
        Representatives of HHS met with members of the transplant community 
    on numerous occasions in the period immediately following publication 
    of the final rule. Since enactment of section 213, representatives of 
    HHS have met on 11 separate occasions with representatives of 11 
    transplant organizations: United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS, the 
    current OPTN contractor), Transplant Recipients International 
    Organization, American Liver Foundation, National Transplant Action 
    Committee, National Minority Organ and Tissue Transplant Education 
    Program, National Kidney Foundation, Patient Access to Transplantation 
    Coalition, American Society of Transplantation, American Society of 
    Transplant Surgeons, North American Transplant Coordinators 
    Organization, and the American Nephrology Nurses Association. On 
    September 15, 1999, an additional meeting with representation invited 
    from all of these organizations took place to discuss together issues 
    that had been surfaced.
    Clarifications
        HHS is further clarifying these issues with this publication:
         ``National'' lists: The final rule does not require single 
    national lists for allocation of organs, beyond the national registry 
    lists already utilized by the OPTN. As underscored by the IOM 
    recommendations, it is the Department's goal to achieve sharing of 
    organs broad enough to achieve medically effective results for 
    patients, especially by providing organs for patients with greatest 
    medical urgency who are appropriate candidates for transplantation. 
    When using the terms ``greatest medical urgency,'' or ``most medically 
    urgent,'' the Department is referring to transplanting those patients 
    whose medical condition, in the judgment of their physicians, makes 
    them suitable candidates for transplantation. The final rule directs 
    the OPTN to overcome as much as possible arbitrary geographic barriers 
    to allocation that restrict the allocation of organs to patients with 
    greatest medical urgency who are appropriate candidates for 
    transplantation and that are not based on medical criteria. Broader 
    sharing was an essential element of the IOM's findings.
         Most Medically Urgent Patients: The final rule follows, 
    and intends to expand, existing policy in serving most medically urgent 
    patients first, again, referring to patients who are suitable 
    candidates for transplantation. It is not the Department's intention to 
    require transplantation of patients too ill to benefit; the final rule 
    specifically prohibits policies that might result in such futile 
    transplantations and organ wastage. Providing available organs to 
    patients with greatest medical urgency who are appropriate candidates 
    for transplantation is already the policy of the OPTN within allocation 
    areas. Transplant priority for patients with greatest medical urgency, 
    whenever they are medically suitable, follows the tenets of medical 
    practice generally and is already accepted throughout the transplant 
    community and general public.
         Medical Factors Affecting Organ Movement: The final rule 
    fully recognizes limitations on movement of organs resulting from 
    medical factors, especially limits of ischemic time. As recommended by 
    the IOM report, and as intended by the 1998 final rule, sharing of 
    organs should be broad enough to enable medically effective use of 
    organs, especially to enable organs to reach the most medically urgent 
    patients, but ischemic time limits and any other medical factors 
    affecting the viability of the organ must be considered in designing 
    allocation policies.
         Small and Medium Sized Transplant Centers: The Department 
    does not expect the final rule to cause the closure of small or medium 
    sized transplant centers or otherwise diminish access to 
    transplantation for certain populations, including those living in 
    rural areas. The IOM report did not find evidence that the rule would 
    have such effects; and a report by the HHS Office of Inspector General 
    (``Fostering Equity in Patient Access to Transplantation: Local Access 
    to Liver Transplantation,'' dated August 1999) concluded that 
    geographic distribution of liver transplant centers is unlikely to 
    change as a result of national policies on organ allocation. The 
    Department is concerned that patient access to transplant services not 
    be adversely affected by closure of centers that are providing quality 
    care, including small and medium sized centers. Thus, the amendments 
    below include provision for monitoring any effects of policy changes on 
    small and medium sized centers. However, HHS and the OPTN should work 
    together to ensure that all transplant programs, regardless of volume, 
    are providing quality care to candidates and recipients.
         Designated Transplant Program Requirements: The final rule 
    carries forward the policies in the proposed
    
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    rule that provided separate staffing and organizational ``designated 
    transplant program'' requirements for non-Medicare participating 
    transplant programs and those that are certified as Medicare approved 
    transplant programs. The Department has received comments similar to 
    those submitted in response to the proposed rule, suggesting that 
    uniform standards be applied for designation status. The Department 
    continues to have no objection to this suggestion in principle, but 
    believes that the OPTN should submit such standards for the Secretary's 
    consideration as possible changes to the Medicare conditions for 
    coverage of organ transplants, which currently contain similar 
    requirements.
    Secretarial Oversight and Enforceability of OPTN Policies
        Virtually all commenters agreed that HHS should exercise an 
    oversight role over OPTN policies, although there were different views 
    among the participants as to how such oversight should be carried out. 
    Exercise of HHS oversight was also one of the five primary 
    recommendations of the IOM report. Further, as explained in 
    ``Legislative and Regulatory History'' above, section 1138 of the 
    Social Security Act elevates OPTN membership and policies to the status 
    of requirements for participation in Medicare and Medicaid for 
    transplant hospitals and OPOs, thus necessitating Secretarial review 
    and oversight authority over those policies. The final rule provides 
    the framework for such oversight as well as the framework for creating 
    a body of enforceable OPTN policies.
        An additional recommendation by the IOM was establishment of an 
    independent scientific review board ``for assisting the Secretary in 
    ensuring that the system of organ procurement and transplantation is 
    grounded on the best available medical science and is as effective and 
    as equitable as possible.'' In response to this recommendation in the 
    IOM report as well as comments received, the Department intends to 
    create such an advisory board, the Advisory Committee on Organ 
    Transplantation. The Department intends to implement the IOM's 
    recommendations that this Committee have several key responsibilities. 
    As recommended by the IOM, the Committee will provide ``timely, 
    nonpartisan review'' to ``assist the Secretary in managing the system 
    in a manner that best serves the public interest.'' It will also, as 
    recommended by the IOM, ``help provide objective information and advice 
    for future directions for the [organ transplantation] system.'' It 
    would also, as recommended by the IOM, ``help insure that policies and 
    procedures are evidence-based and guided by the best available 
    scientific and medical precepts.'' In order that the Committee fulfill 
    this latter responsibility, Sec. 121.4 (b)(2) and (d) have been revised 
    to reflect this role.
        When the OPTN proposes enforceable policies, the Secretary will ask 
    the Committee for its views on the proposals when the proposals are 
    published in the Federal Register for public comment. The Committee's 
    views, public comments, and the Department's views will then serve as 
    the basis for discussions with the OPTN. If, after these discussions, 
    the Secretary wishes to direct that the OPTN revise its proposals, the 
    OPTN will have the opportunity to suggest revisions. If the Secretary 
    does not agree with the OPTN's revised approach (or if it does not 
    respond in a timely manner), the Secretary may require the OPTN to take 
    other appropriate actions. However, the Secretary will ask the 
    Committee for its views on the specific proposed actions before 
    transmitting them to the OPTN. A similar approach may also be used 
    should the Secretary review other OPTN policies, or elect to evaluate 
    critical comments received by the Secretary relating to the manner in 
    which the OPTN is carrying out its duties.
        It is not the desire, nor is it the intention, of the Department to 
    interfere in the practice of medicine. Decisions about who should 
    receive a particular organ in a particular situation involve levels of 
    detail, subtlety, and urgency that must be judged by transplant 
    professionals. The Advisory Committee will greatly assist the Secretary 
    with respect to the medical and scientific components of OPTN policies. 
    The medical community has substantial contributions to make within the 
    deliberative process for developing OPTN policies, as well as in 
    individual decisions involved in clinical transplantation practice.
        The rule also has been revised to emphasize that the Secretary's 
    review is intended to ensure consistency between OPTN policies and the 
    National Organ Transplant Act and this regulation. This revision is 
    intended to emphasize, as the IOM did in its report, that the 
    Secretary's oversight will further the public interest, a role assigned 
    to the Department by the National Organ Transplant Act and articulated 
    in this regulation.
    OPTN Board Composition
        Participants expressed a variety of views on requirements 
    concerning the composition of the OPTN Board of Directors. Some 
    participants believed that the rule should require, not merely 
    authorize, the Board to include at least 50 percent representation of 
    transplant physicians and transplant surgeons, to ensure a 
    preponderance of medical expertise. Others suggested more even division 
    of representation among transplant physicians and transplant surgeons, 
    other non-physician transplant professionals, and candidates, 
    recipients, donors, their families, and the general public. Concern was 
    also raised that a combination of percentage representation 
    requirements with specific categorical representation requirements 
    would make the Board so large as to be unwieldy, if the Board chose to 
    allow 50 percent representation of transplant physicians and surgeons. 
    The Department has reorganized and revised the Board and Executive 
    Committee composition provisions to strengthen the role of transplant 
    physicians and surgeons on the Board, consistent with the rule's thrust 
    that allocation policy (one of the OPTN's most important 
    responsibilities) be based on objective and measurable medical criteria 
    and sound medical judgment, to strengthen the role of transplant 
    candidates, recipients, donors, and their families on the Board and its 
    Executive Committee, and to provide the OPTN greater flexibility in 
    determining the appropriate size for the Board. This document includes 
    amendments that identify categories of membership, but do not require a 
    specific number of members from each category. This amendment requires 
    approximately 50 percent transplant physician or transplant surgeon 
    membership, instead of no more than 50 percent, and specifies at least 
    25 percent transplant candidates, transplant recipients, organ donors, 
    and family members.
        We have retained the provision designed to avoid even an appearance 
    of a conflict of interest by requiring that transplant candidates, 
    recipients, donors and family members on the Board not have an 
    ``employment or similar relationship'' with certain entities and 
    individuals involved in transplantation. However, we received comments 
    suggesting that such individuals may have exceptional commitment or 
    knowledge and should not be automatically disqualified from Board 
    membership, and that, in any event, the Board should have additional 
    flexibility in this area. We have revised this provision to authorize 
    the Board to waive this requirement for up to half of
    
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    these members. We expect the Board to use this flexibility consistent 
    with the rule's goal of broad involvement of patients, recipients, 
    donors, families and the public in the formulation of transplant 
    policy.
    Broader Geographic Sharing of Organs
        The final rule's emphasis on broader sharing of organs is being 
    clarified through this document. Establishment of liver allocation 
    areas broad enough to provide for medically effective allocation of 
    organs was the leading recommendation of the IOM report. Some 
    commenters expressed concern about the need for the transplant system 
    to use standard criteria for listing patients and assigning their 
    urgency status, and likewise the need for enforcement mechanisms to 
    ensure that medically urgent patients who are appropriate candidates 
    for transplantation are not disadvantaged through misuse of listing 
    criteria or priority rankings. The final rule calls on the OPTN to 
    develop such standard criteria, and to monitor compliance with them, 
    prospectively if appropriate. Further, by establishing a framework for 
    Secretarial review and approval of OPTN policies, as well as review and 
    evaluation procedures for the OPTN, the rule provides a foundation for 
    enforcement of these standard criteria.
    Frequency and Timeliness of Data
        Most participants expressed support for enhanced frequency and 
    timeliness of data. Likewise, the IOM report strongly urged 
    improvements in data collection and dissemination, both for physician 
    and patient information and to provide outcome data that may improve 
    understanding of best medical practices. As OPTN contractor, UNOS 
    expressed concern about its ability to meet the frequency requirements 
    in the April 2 final rule. The Department has decided to retain the 6 
    month data presentation requirement. The Department recognizes that 
    UNOS' concerns stem in part from its belief that certain types of data 
    may not need to be updated as frequently as others. Therefore, the 
    Department has added a provision that would permit longer intervals for 
    certain data.
        The Department recognizes the progress that UNOS has made in 
    increasing the availability of program-specific information for use by 
    patients, families, physicians, and payors. To respond to the 
    contractor's concerns regarding its ability to meet the frequency of 
    the reporting requirement in the final rule, HHS will not require the 
    submission of the first program-specific report under 
    Sec. 121.11(b)(1)(iv) until June 30, 2000. This will allow OPTN member 
    organizations adequate time to become fully Y2K compliant and ensure 
    that all data submitted to the OPTN is done so electronically, and will 
    enable the contractor to meet the Department's and the IOM's 
    expectations that information be more timely and accessible.
    Use of Waiting Time
        In general, the IOM found the emphasis on cumulative waiting times 
    to be inappropriate as a measure of equity in the transplant system and 
    as a criterion for allocation for less medically urgent patients, 
    pointing instead toward ``more meaningful indicators of equitable 
    access'' such as ``status-specific rates of pretransplantation 
    mortality and transplantation.'' The IOM report indicated, however, 
    that the use of ``waiting times in status'' for the most medically 
    urgent liver transplant patients (those in status 1 and 2A) was ``an 
    appropriate criterion, along with necessary medical criteria.'' For 
    less medically urgent patients (statuses 2B and 3), the IOM recommended 
    that the OPTN discontinue use of waiting time as an allocation 
    criterion and instead develop ``an appropriate medical triage system . 
    . . to ensure equitable allocation of organs to patients in these 
    categories.'' HHS generally agrees with these findings, although the 
    Department believes that waiting time in status (unlike cumulative 
    waiting time) can be one among several useful criteria in assessing 
    variability in results for patients at different transplant centers. To 
    date, waiting times have been used in examining the performance of the 
    transplant system in part because waiting times are used by the OPTN as 
    an allocation criterion, and in part due to lack of better measures. It 
    is for these reasons that reducing any variations in ``waiting time in 
    status,'' especially for the most medically urgent patients, was 
    included as a performance measure in the final rule published April 2. 
    In addition, the IOM recommendation points again to the need for better 
    data to provide alternatives to waiting time as a performance measure. 
    Based on the IOM's recommendations and comments from the transplant 
    community, the Department has made additional refinements to the rule's 
    discussion of waiting times.
        The Department's approach in this section follows the 
    recommendations of the IOM and responds to issues raised by commenters. 
    First, the Department agrees with the IOM recommendations that 
    ``overall'' waiting times are an inappropriate measure. The concept of 
    using ``waiting time in status'' is, however, permitted as a factor in 
    allocation policy.
        Second, Sec. 121.8(b)(4) requires the OPTN to use performance 
    indicators to assess transplant program performance and to seek to 
    reduce the variations among transplant programs with respect to 
    selected performance indicators. This ``performance indicator'' 
    approach is consistent with the IOM's recommendation that data be used 
    to assess transplant program performance. Among the alternatives 
    available to the OPTN is the performance indicator ``waiting time in 
    status.'' Consistent with the IOM's approach, if the OPTN retains 
    waiting time in status for allocation purposes for medically urgent 
    categories similar to current Status 1 and 2A in its revised liver 
    allocation policies, the Department would expect the OPTN to use 
    waiting time in status as a performance indicator for liver patients, 
    along with necessary medical criteria.
        Regarding the general approach of reducing variations among 
    transplant programs with respect to selected performance indicators, we 
    also expect the OPTN to work towards improving, where possible, the 
    outcomes under these indicators. For example, if the OPTN used the 
    performance indicator pretransplantation mortality rates for liver 
    patients by medical status, as recommended by the IOM, then the 
    Department would expect the OPTN to seek to reduce the variations in 
    this performance indicator by improving pre-transplant survival at 
    programs where it fell significantly below the national rates.
        We also note that, although Sec. 121.8(b)(2) requires that the 
    medical characteristics of patients within each category be as similar 
    as possible, the IOM observed that the current liver status categories 
    2B and 3 were heterogeneous. As a result, some patients in these 
    categories need life-saving transplants sooner than others. The other 
    patients, often with longer waiting times, can, nevertheless, wait 
    longer periods of time without increased risk of death. Therefore, the 
    IOM concluded that the OPTN should not use waiting times as a criterion 
    for patients in these categories. Some commenters, however, suggested 
    that the OPTN would have difficulty further refining its existing 
    status categories. Commenters also requested that the OPTN be allowed 
    to continue to use waiting times in some fashion for these patients. 
    This rule provides the OPTN flexibility to continue to use waiting 
    times for patients in these categories but would require that such use 
    not
    
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    override medical urgency considerations.
        However, the Department expects, as the IOM concluded, that broader 
    sharing of organs should occur for all patients and that organs will go 
    to more medically urgent patients who are appropriate candidates for 
    transplants before being offered to patients whose condition permits 
    them to wait longer for a transplant.
    OPTN Review of Member Compliance With Final Rule Requirements and 
    Mandatory OPTN Policies
        Many members of the transplant community expressed concern about 
    how best to promote compliance with OPTN policies. Section 121.8(a)(7) 
    has been added to emphasize that the OPTN should especially promote 
    compliance with approved allocation policies through prospective and 
    retrospective reviews of programs' compliance with allocation policies. 
    In addition, the OPTN is required by Sec. 121.10 to conduct reviews and 
    evaluations of each OPTN member's compliance with these rules and 
    approved OPTN policies. Thus, the OPTN is required to implement a 
    review process to ensure that individuals receiving transplants are 
    accurately listed and in proper classification categories to receive 
    organs. Currently, UNOS liver and thoracic Regional Review Boards 
    (RRBs) provide retrospective review of designation of status 1 and 2A 
    patients for livers and 1A patients for hearts. The Department will 
    explore with the OPTN contractor issues related to the conduct of 
    prospective and/or retrospective reviews of all listings and changes in 
    status categories to assure that programs are making appropriate 
    classification determinations. Reviews, prospective and retrospective, 
    might be performed by existing OPTN RRBs. In addition, the Secretary 
    may ask independent third parties, such as the Joint Commission on the 
    Accreditation of Health Organizations (JCAHO), or Utilization and 
    Quality Control Peer Review Organizations (PROs) established under Part 
    B of title XI of the Social Security Act, to monitor the OPTN 
    enforcement system by independently conducting audits of the work of 
    the RRBs.
    Incentives for High Performing OPOs
        Concern has been expressed that, by emphasizing broader sharing of 
    organs, the final rule might bring about reduced organ donation. The 
    Department disagrees, and the IOM report found some evidence that, 
    where broader sharing is currently occurring, donations have increased. 
    In response to these concerns, however, HHS has considered the 
    possibility that positive rewards might be offered for high performing 
    OPOs, to add to incentives for organ donation. The Department believes 
    that high performance by OPOs should be rewarded in a way that does not 
    disadvantage patients by compromising one of the fundamental objectives 
    that the final rule is trying to achieve--namely broader sharing of 
    organs. Therefore, the Department encourages the OPTN to develop and 
    recommend to the Secretary policy incentives to reward high-performing 
    OPOs. In addition, in response to longer-standing concerns, HHS' Health 
    Care Financing Administration (HCFA) is reviewing the way it currently 
    measures OPO performance.
    Policies to Address Socioeconomic Barriers
        Some in the transplant community have expressed concern that the 
    final rule would require transplant hospitals to make their own 
    financial resources available to pay for transplant and follow-up care 
    for patients unable to pay. However, this was not the intention of the 
    April 2 final rule. The rule calls on the OPTN Board of Directors to 
    recommend policies that would reduce inequities in access resulting 
    from socioeconomic status and ensure that the registration fee itself 
    does not represent a barrier to transplantation.
    Registration Fees
        One commenter objected to Secretarial review of that portion of 
    registration fees paid by OPTN members (and indirectly by patients and 
    their insurers) that represents expenditures by the contractor that are 
    not directly related to the tasks performed under the contracts with 
    HHS. The final rule specifies that the Secretary has oversight of that 
    portion of the registration fee directly related to operation of the 
    OPTN.
    Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)-HCFA Cooperation
        A commenter noted the need for increased coordination between HRSA 
    and HCFA on transplantation issues within their respective areas of 
    responsibility. HRSA and HCFA have pursued several cooperative efforts 
    to achieve increased organ donation, a goal of the Administration's 
    National Organ and Tissue Donation Initiative, which was launched in 
    December 1997. On June 22, 1998, HCFA published a final rule (42 CFR 
    part 482) regarding Medicare Hospital Conditions of Participation, 
    which requires hospitals to refer all deaths and imminent deaths to 
    local OPOs and conduct donation request training programs for 
    appropriate staff representatives. In 1999, HRSA and HCFA jointly 
    sponsored projects to encourage collaboration between hospitals and 
    OPOs in effectively implementing this regulation. HCFA's responsibility 
    for OPO performance standard establishment, certification and re-
    certification of OPOs, and OPO waiver request review involves close 
    cooperation with HRSA to identify practices most likely to benefit 
    donor families and transplant patients, and that impact current organ 
    allocation policy. In addition, HCFA and HRSA are working together to 
    enhance and better coordinate collection, reporting, and analysis of 
    organ procurement and transplant data in an effort to assure optimum 
    performance of the OPTN.
    
    D. Data
    
        Section 213 called for ``timely and accurate program-specific 
    information on the performance of transplant programs.'' The IOM 
    report, in reviewing 68,000 medical records, made a significant 
    contribution in the data area, although the report also cited the 
    paucity of data available and recommended improved data collection and 
    dissemination. In addition, UNOS recently has added Internet-based 
    capability, both for providing information to physicians and the public 
    and for collecting data from its members.
        Finally, HHS has completed new transplant program-specific analyses 
    that show varying outcomes for patients among different transplant 
    hospitals. Department staff analyzed OPTN patient outcome data for 
    liver and heart transplants with respect to three critical issues: (1) 
    The likelihood that, having been listed as a transplant candidate, a 
    patient will receive an organ within one year; (2) the likelihood that 
    a patient will die within one year of listing while awaiting 
    transplantation; and, (3) the likelihood that a patient will still be 
    alive one year after listing, irrespective of whether he or she 
    underwent a transplant procedure. After risk adjustment (i.e., 
    adjustment for differences in the mix of patients' health status from 
    program to program), the analyses revealed substantial differences in 
    outcomes from one transplant program to another. The principal findings 
    for liver transplants illustrate that:
         Ten percent of the programs have a standardized risk-
    adjusted rate of transplantation within one year of listing of 71 
    percent or more; whereas,
    
    [[Page 56655]]
    
    for another ten percent of the programs, the rate is 25 percent or 
    less;
         The likelihood of dying within one year of listing while 
    awaiting a transplant ranges from less than 8 percent to more than 22 
    percent; and
         The likelihood of surviving one year after listing as a 
    transplant candidate or a recipient ranges from approximately 65 
    percent to almost 86 percent.
        The analogous values for heart transplants are 72 and 36 percent 
    (transplantation within one year of listing), 9 and 23 percent (death 
    within one year of listing while awaiting a transplant), 67 and 84 
    percent (survival for one year after listing irrespective of whether 
    transplanted or not).
        In the course of performing these analyses, Department staff 
    identified gaps in the data currently collected by the Scientific 
    Registry--e.g., additional clinical details about patients' conditions 
    at the time of listing (which could improve risk adjustment) and 
    additional data on clinical complications (which could help in 
    assessing quality of life following transplantation). The Department 
    has provided these analyses to UNOS and has encouraged it, in its 
    management of the OPTN and its operation of the Scientific Registry, to 
    broaden the scope of data collection and make increased use of program-
    specific performance analyses. The analyses are included in the U.S. 
    Department of Health and Human Services 1999 Report to Congress on the 
    Scientific and Clinical Status of Organ Transplantation.
    
    II. Public Comments
    
        Between April 2 and September 16, 1998, we received a total of 
    approximately 2,500 comments on the final rule. (Letters with petitions 
    or with form letters attached were counted as one comment. HHS received 
    a total of approximately 20,000 form letters.) The majority of the 
    comments reflected issues addressed in ``Clarifications'' above. This 
    document includes changes intended to make these issues clear. Other 
    issues raised by commenters were discussed in the meetings conducted 
    this year pursuant to section 213 of the Appropriation Act, and they 
    are also outlined above.
    
    III. Changes in the Regulatory Text
    
        As a result of the comments received, the Department has made 
    several modifications to the final rule published on April 2, 1998. 
    Some changes have been made to clarify the regulatory language. Other 
    revisions to the regulatory text add provisions or modify requirements 
    from the previously published final rule.
    
    1. Definition of Organ
    
        The Department has deleted bone marrow from the definition of organ 
    in Sec. 121.2 because it falls within the scope of a different 
    statutory authority. Although the NOTA refers to bone marrow for 
    purposes of the Scientific Registry, subsequent legislation established 
    a separate program to address ``unrelated'' bone marrow transplants. A 
    commenter recommended that the definition be expanded to include 
    intestine, stomach, or a collection of human cells that perform a vital 
    function of an organ, including any organ containing vasculature that 
    carries blood after transplantation. In the Preamble to the 1998 rule, 
    the Department stated: ``The inclusion of other organs, such as the 
    stomach and intestines, not only would have an impact on other 
    requirements in these regulations such as the development of allocation 
    policies, certification of designated transplant programs, and 
    establishment of training requirements but also would affect OPO 
    requirements to procure these organs in accordance with HCFA rules. 
    Thus, the Department believes it would be premature for this rule to 
    specify other organs in addition to those already named. Instead, the 
    Department will direct the OPTN contractor to consider which organs or 
    parts of organs, if any, should be subject to OPTN policies, and to 
    submit recommendations to the Secretary.'' The Department's position on 
    this issue remains unchanged.
    
    2. National List
    
        The term ``national list'' has been replaced with ``waiting list'' 
    in Sec. 121.2, and throughout the final rule. The term ``national 
    list'' was incorporated into the regulation to reflect statutory 
    language in section 372 of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act, 42 
    U.S.C. 274, which requires the OPTN to ``establish a national list of 
    individuals who need organs.'' Current OPTN allocation convention 
    derives subordinate lists from a single database and current OPTN 
    policy allocates zero-antigen mismatched kidneys nationally, due to 
    scientifically demonstrated improvements in patient and graft survival 
    resulting from this policy. Furthermore, ischemic times and patient 
    outcomes make such an approach appropriate in the case of zero-antigen 
    mismatched kidneys. If supported by scientific evidence, the Department 
    has no objection to this approach.
    
    3. Composition of OPTN Board of Directors
    
        The Department wishes to ensure adequate patient, donor and family 
    representation on the OPTN Board of Directors, while giving the OPTN 
    sufficient flexibility to constitute a balanced and effective Board. 
    Thus the Department has included a requirement under Sec. 121.3(a) that 
    the Board of Directors shall include at least 25 percent transplant 
    candidates, transplant recipients, organ donors, and family members. In 
    response to comments, the Department also has revised Sec. 121.3(a)(1) 
    to enable the OPTN to govern itself with greater flexibility than was 
    provided by the 1998 rule. The revised language maintains the 
    requirement that the Board of Directors include representatives of 
    OPOs, transplant centers, voluntary health associations, transplant 
    coordinators, histocompatibility experts, other non-physician 
    transplant professionals, and the general public, but does not mandate 
    a specific number of members from each category. The Secretary believes 
    that the less prescriptive language in this revision will better allow 
    the OPTN itself to determine the appropriate size of, and 
    representation on, its Board of Directors, while achieving a balance 
    among physician, patient, donor, family and other representatives.
        Section 121.3(a)(2) has been revised. That paragraph prohibited 
    those Board members who were identified as transplant recipients, 
    transplant candidates, organ donors, family members, or members of the 
    general public to be employees of, or have similar relationships with, 
    specified categories of institutional members required to be on the 
    Board. The revised paragraph is more flexible, as described more fully 
    above.
        As discussed above, Sec. 121.3(a) has been revised to require that 
    approximately 50 percent of the Board members be transplant surgeons or 
    transplant physicians, rather than the language of the April 2, 1998, 
    rule requiring no more than 50 percent, and that at least 25 percent of 
    its members be transplant candidates, transplant recipients, organ 
    donors, and family members. The comparable requirements for the 
    Executive Committee of the Board have been similarly revised. 
    Transplant physicians or transplant surgeons elected to the Board or 
    Executive Committee under other categories must be counted toward the 
    requirements of these paragraphs of the final rule.
    
    [[Page 56656]]
    
        Furthermore, the requirement for a two year term for Board members 
    in former Sec. 121.3(a)(4) has been deleted. Board members have diverse 
    backgrounds and will require different periods of time to become 
    familiar with the complex issues coming before the Board. Thus, we 
    believe that it is appropriate for the OPTN to determine for itself the 
    length of the term for Board members, subject to Departmental review.
    
    4. Socioeconomic Issues
    
        As articulated in the April 2, 1998, rule, the Department is 
    concerned that all patients in the country have access to 
    transplantation and encourages the OPTN to work toward this goal. 
    Several members of the transplant community, however, commented that 
    the provisions of Sec. 121.4 addressing socioeconomic issues would 
    require transplant hospitals to make their own financial resources 
    available to pay for transplantation and follow-up care for patients 
    unable to pay. In response to these comments, the Department has 
    revised this section to specify that paragraph (a)(3)(i) refers only to 
    the registration fee and has revised paragraph (a)(3)(ii) to clarify 
    that resources for patients unable to pay should be sought from all 
    available sources.
    
    5. Secretarial Review of OPTN Policies
    
        In response to comments asking which OPTN policies are to be 
    submitted to the Secretary, the Department has modified the language of 
    Sec. 121.4(b)(2) to provide that the Board of Directors is required to 
    provide the Secretary with proposed policies that the OPTN recommends 
    be enforceable under Sec. 121.10 (including allocation policies) and 
    others as specified by the Secretary. As discussed above, the rule has 
    been revised to adopt the IOM's recommendation that the Advisory 
    Committee assist the Secretary in reviewing OPTN policies and practices 
    as well as to indicate the purposes of the Secretary's review.
        The timing requirement has also been changed from 30 days to 60 
    days before implementation of the proposed policy to provide a more 
    realistic estimate of the time required for review by the Advisory 
    Committee and the public, should such review be necessary.
    
    6. Registration Fee
    
        One commenter objected to Secretarial review of the patient 
    registration fee, maintaining that this fee is paid voluntarily by OPTN 
    members for the services provided to them by the contractor. The 
    Department agrees that a portion of the current fee represents a 
    voluntary payment by OPTN members to the contractor for services 
    outside the direct operation of the OPTN on behalf of patients, while 
    another portion represents the payment provided by patients and their 
    insurers for the operation of the OPTN system itself. Consequently, the 
    Department has modified the language of Sec. 121.5(c) to indicate that 
    the portion of the registration fee subject to Secretarial oversight is 
    that portion directly related to operation of the OPTN; any other fee 
    may only be charged on a voluntary basis to OPTN members. In this 
    regard, the Department would interpret the ``reasonable costs'' for 
    operating the OPTN to include additional costs of compliance under 
    Sec. 121.8(a)(7) and reviews and enforcement under Sec. 121.10.
    
    7. Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
    
        Commenters suggested revising the language of Sec. 121.6(b) to 
    authorize transplantation of organs from HIV positive donors to HIV 
    positive recipients. The Department has revised Sec. 121.6(b) to 
    reflect the language of the statute. We note, however, that HCFA 
    regulations governing OPOs, at 42 CFR 486.306(q), require OPOs to 
    screen donors to ``[e]nsure that appropriate donor screening and 
    infection tests, consistent with the OPTN standards and the CDC 
    [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] guidelines * * * are 
    performed * * * to prevent the acquisition of organs that are infected 
    with the etiologic agent for acquired immune deficiency syndrome.'' The 
    OPO regulations require that OPO donor screening meet the two 
    thresholds of the OPTN standards as well as the CDC guidelines. OPOs 
    must comply with the CDC ``Guidelines for Preventing Transmission of 
    Human Immunodeficiency Virus Through Transplantation of Human Tissue 
    and Organs'' as appended to the regulations for OPOs (see 42 CFR part 
    486, Subpart G, Appendix A). As a result, the OPO regulations will 
    still preclude acquisition of an organ from an HIV-positive donor for 
    transplantation. The OPTN may propose standards permitting such 
    transplantation to the Secretary for consideration and potential change 
    in existing CDC guidelines.
    
    8. Criteria for Listing Patients
    
        The 1998 rule set as a performance goal that the OPTN standardize 
    objective and measurable medical criteria for including patients on the 
    waiting list. In drafting the language of that section, the Department 
    expected that the criteria developed for adding patients to the waiting 
    list would inherently contain criteria for removing patients from the 
    list. Commenters pointed out that the rule should be specific in this 
    respect. The Department adopted this suggested clarification in 
    Sec. 121.8(b)(1).
    
    9. Organ Allocation
    
        The Department received many comments on this section, especially 
    former Sec. 121.8(a). We have reorganized this entire section for 
    clarity and addressed points raised by the IOM as well as several 
    issues raised by commenters. Some commenters asked that we clarify the 
    OPTN's ability to have different allocation policies for different 
    types of organs (or combinations of organs) to be transplanted. 
    Language to this effect is now found in Sec. 121.8(a)(4). The 
    Department wishes to emphasize that this means that the OPTN may take a 
    different approach in defining priority ranking under Sec. 121.8(b)(2) 
    for organs like kidneys where the technology of renal dialysis permits 
    some flexibility in determining the timing of a transplant. Similarly, 
    a different approach may also be taken where such ``rescue'' techniques 
    are available for other organs. Such alternatives may be used, 
    consistent with sound medical judgment.
        Other commenters suggested that the concepts of using sound medical 
    judgment, avoidance of futile transplants or wastage of organs, and 
    promotion of the efficient use of organs should be applicable to all 
    the performance goals. Language adopting this suggestion is now found 
    in Sec. 121.8(a)(5).
        We have added to Sec. 121.8(a)(5) a provision that allocation 
    policy seek to promote patient access to transplants, an issue Congress 
    asked the IOM to address. As discussed above, we have also added at 
    Sec. 121.8(a)(7) language to promote compliance with and enforcement of 
    approved allocation policies.
        We have revised the discussion of medical urgency now found in 
    Sec. 121.8(b)(2). We have made clear that the need to rank patients or 
    categories of patients in order of decreasing medical urgency only 
    applies to otherwise medically appropriate candidates for transplants. 
    This is consistent with the provisions found in Sec. 121.8(a) that 
    require allocation policies be developed in accordance with sound 
    medical judgment and avoidance of futile transplants and organ wastage.
    
    [[Page 56657]]
    
        Some commenters suggested that the rule was unclear as to how 
    ``medical urgency'' applies to kidney allocation policy. We revised 
    this section in response to comments that the term ``status 
    categories,'' as currently used for liver and heart patients, is not 
    used for kidney patients. (Instead, a point system is used to rank 
    patients when an organ becomes available.) The use of the term 
    ``patients or categories of patients'' in this section makes clear that 
    ranking patients rather than categories of patients is permitted under 
    this rule. As discussed above, we intend for ranking to be applied in 
    the context of the factors listed in Sec. 121.8(a), especially in 
    accordance with sound medical judgment. Therefore, we believe that 
    there may well be different approaches to kidney allocation policy than 
    those for other types of organs, perhaps along the lines of the current 
    policies, which take into account such factors as immunologic 
    compatibility between the donor and patient, whether the patient's 
    immune system is highly sensitized, and other medical factors.
        Commenters suggested that the Department closely monitor the 
    changes to allocation policies made after the initial reviews required 
    under this section to ensure that the new policies are achieving the 
    desired improvements in the allocation system. The Department intends 
    to monitor the effects of these changes closely and in consultation 
    with the OPTN. In addition to this monitoring and consultation, the 
    Department will formally determine whether further changes are 
    necessary six months and 12 months after the changes to allocation 
    policies made after the initial reviews go into effect.
        Finally, as discussed above, we have given the OPTN additional 
    flexibility with respect to performance indicators, including waiting 
    times, in response both to comments received and the IOM report.
        The Department wishes to emphasize, however, that these changes are 
    not intended to limit the ability of the OPTN to address special 
    situations such as the unique needs of young children.
    
    10. Department of Veterans Affairs Hospitals
    
        The term ``Dean's Committee'' has been deleted from 
    Sec. 121.9(a)(3), as this is not a term currently used by the 
    Department of Veterans Affairs. Currently, the Department of Veterans 
    Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, designates specific VA medical 
    centers to carry out organ transplantation. To cover the possibility 
    that transplants may also be carried out in other Federal hospitals, as 
    well as those owned and operated by the Department of Defense (DoD), 
    transplant programs in DoD or other Federal hospitals have been added 
    to those eligible to receive organs for transplantation under 
    Sec. 121.9(a).
    
    11. Enforcement
    
        Section 121.10(c)(1) has been edited to clarify that appropriate 
    enforcement action may include termination of a transplant program's 
    reimbursement under Medicare and Medicaid. In addition, the Department 
    wishes to clarify that the regulation permits the OPTN to develop 
    policies that will contain lesser or intermediate level sanctions that 
    may be taken by the OPTN, but these policies must first be approved by 
    the Secretary in order for them to be enforceable.
    
    12. Reporting Requirements
    
        Section 121.11(b)(2) has been amended to include transplant program 
    costs among the items to be reported by transplant hospitals to the 
    OPTN and the Secretary. Although the language in the previously 
    published final rule was sufficiently broad to permit the Secretary to 
    specify that cost information be submitted, it was felt that its 
    specific inclusion in the rule would ensure that such information would 
    be made available on a timely basis when requested, consistent with 
    section 213. Because of the difficulty in defining costs for these 
    purposes, the Department will accept measures of resource utilization.
    
    13. Effect of the Regulation on State Laws (former Sec. 121.12)
    
        The inclusion of Sec. 121.12 in the 1998 regulation was intended to 
    be consonant with longstanding Constitutional principles regarding the 
    relationship between the Federal and State governments. It reflected 
    the HHS belief that Congress intended the statutory scheme it 
    established under NOTA to result ``in the nationwide distribution of 
    organs equitably among transplant patients.'' Section 372(b)(2)(D) of 
    the Public Heath Service Act. Nevertheless, because the Department 
    views this result as flowing from the statutory scheme, the section of 
    the regulation articulating the Department's views on the matter is 
    unnecessary as a legal matter. Accordingly, Sec. 121.12 has been 
    removed.
    
    14. Advisory Committee on Organ Transplantation
    
        The Department intends to implement the recommendation of the IOM, 
    as discussed above, to create an independent, multidisciplinary 
    scientific advisory board which will assist the Secretary in, 
    ``ensuring that the system of organ procurement and transplantation is 
    grounded on the best available medical science and is as effective and 
    as equitable as possible.'' Constitution of such an advisory committee 
    and its consultation by the Secretary, as appropriate, in the words of 
    the IOM, ``would also enhance public confidence in the integrity and 
    effectiveness of the system.'' The Department has added a new 
    Sec. 121.12 to provide for the establishment of an Advisory Committee 
    on Organ Transplantation. The Committee, to be established in 
    accordance with the Federal Advisory Committee Act [5 U.S.C. App.], 
    will be available to the Secretary to provide comments on proposed OPTN 
    policies and other matters related to transplantation. The Committee 
    will be composed of individuals drawn from diverse backgrounds such as 
    health care public policy, transplantation medicine and surgery, non-
    physician transplant professions, biostatistics, immunology, health 
    economics, epidemiology, bioethics, and law. As part of this process of 
    establishing the Committee, the Secretary intends to solicit 
    nominations for Committee members from the transplant community and the 
    general public.
    
    IV. Impact Analyses
    
        We have examined the impact of this amendatory language as required 
    by Executive Order 12866, section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform 
    Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4) and the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) 
    (Pub. L. 96-354). Executive Order 12866 directs agencies to assess 
    costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, when 
    regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize 
    benefits. The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also requires that 
    agencies prepare an assessment of anticipated costs and benefits before 
    proposing any rule that may mandate an annual expenditure by State, 
    local, or tribal governments of $100 million or more.
        Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612), if an 
    action has a significant economic effect on a substantial number of 
    small businesses, the Secretary must specifically consider the effects 
    on small business entities and analyze regulatory options that could 
    lessen the impact of the rule.
        Section 1102(b) of the Social Security Act requires us to prepare a 
    regulatory impact analysis for any regulation that may have a 
    significant impact on the operations of a substantial number of small 
    rural hospitals.
    
    [[Page 56658]]
    
        The amendatory language set forth in this document makes no changes 
    that have a significant economic effect on State, local or tribal 
    governments, hospitals or patients; therefore, we certify that no 
    additional regulatory analysis is required. We have also concluded, 
    based on the findings of the Institute of Medicine and the General 
    Accounting Office under section 213(b), discussed earlier in this 
    Preamble, and the Secretary certifies, that this amendatory language 
    would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 
    small entities; therefore, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not 
    required.
        We are also not preparing a rural impact statement since we have 
    determined, and the Secretary certifies, that this amendatory language 
    would not have a significant impact on the operations of a substantial 
    number of small rural hospitals.
        The earlier analyses from the April 2, 1998, final rule remain 
    applicable to that rule and are not altered by these amendments.
    
    List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 121
    
        Health care, Hospitals, Organ transplantation, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
        Dated: October 13, 1999.
    Claude Earl Fox,
    Administrator, Health Resources and Services Administration.
    
        Approved: October 15, 1999.
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary.
    
        Accordingly, 42 CFR part 121 is amended as follows:
    
    PART 121--ORGAN PROCUREMENT AND TRANSPLANTATION NETWORK
    
        1. The authority citation for part 121 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sections 215, 371-376 of the Public Health Service 
    Act (42 U.S.C. 216, 273-274d); sections 1102, 1106, 1138 and 1871 of 
    the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1306, 1320b-8 and 1395hh).
    
        2. Paragraph (b) of Sec. 121.1 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 121.1  Applicability.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) In accordance with section 1138 of the Social Security Act, 
    hospitals in which organ transplants are performed and which 
    participate in the programs under titles XVIII or XIX of the Social 
    Security Act, and organ procurement organizations designated under 
    section 1138(b) of the Social Security Act, are subject to the 
    requirements of this part.
        3. Amend Sec. 121.2 as follows:
        a. Remove the definition for the ``National list''.
        b. Amend the definition of ``OPTN computer match program'' by 
    revising the words ``national list'' to read ``waiting list''.
        c. Amend the definition of ``Organ'' by removing the words ``and 
    for the purpose of the Scientific Registry, the term also includes bone 
    marrow''.
        d. Amend the definition of ``Organ procurement organization'' by 
    revising the words ``Section 1138(b)'' to read ``section 1138(b)''.
        e. Amend the definition of ``Organ procurement and transplantation 
    network or OPTN'' by revising the words ``Section 372'' to read 
    ``section 372''.
        f. Amend the definition of ``Scientific Registry'' by revising the 
    words ``Section 373'' to read ``section 373''.
        g. Amend the definition of ``Transplant candidate'' by revising the 
    words national list'' to read ``waiting list''.
        h. Add a definition for ``Waiting list'' in alphabetical order.
        The addition reads as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 121.2  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Waiting list means the OPTN computer-based list of transplant 
    candidates.
        4. Amend Sec. 121.3 as follows:
        a. Revise the heading of paragraph (a).
        b. Revise paragraph (a)(1).
        c. Remove paragraph (a)(2).
        d. Remove paragraph (a)(3).
        e. Remove paragraph (a)(4).
        f. Remove the heading of paragraph (b).
        g. Redesignate paragraph (b)(1) as paragraph (a)(2) and revise it.
        h. Redesignate paragraph (b)(2) as paragraph (a)(3) and amend the 
    newly designated paragraph (a)(3) by removing the paragraph heading.
        i. Redesignate paragraph (b)(3) as paragraph (a)(4) and amend newly 
    designated paragraph (a)(4) by removing the paragraph heading.
        j. In newly designated paragraph (a)(4)(ii), revise the term 
    ``potential transplant candidates'' to read ``transplant candidates, 
    transplant recipients, organ donors and family members''.
        k. Remove paragraph (b)(4).
        l. Redesignate paragraph (c) as paragraph (b).
        m. Redesignate paragraph (d) as paragraph (c) and revise the word 
    ``Status'' in the heading to read ``status''.
        n. Redesignate paragraph (e) as paragraph (d) and revise it.
        The revisions read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 121.3  The OPTN.
    
        (a) Organization of the OPTN. (1) The OPTN shall establish a Board 
    of Directors of whatever size the OPTN determines appropriate. The 
    Board of Directors shall include:
        (i) Approximately 50 percent transplant surgeons or transplant 
    physicians;
        (ii) At least 25 percent transplant candidates, transplant 
    recipients, organ donors and family members. These members should 
    represent the diversity of the population of transplant candidates, 
    transplant recipients, organ donors and family members served by the 
    OPTN including, to the extent practicable, the minority and gender 
    diversity of this population. These members shall not be employees of, 
    or have a similar relationship with OPOs, transplant centers, voluntary 
    health organizations, transplant coordinators, histocompatibility 
    experts, or other non-physician transplant professionals; however, the 
    Board may waive this requirement for not more than 50 percent of these 
    members; and
        (iii) Representatives of OPOs, transplant hospitals, voluntary 
    health associations, transplant coordinators, histocompatibility 
    experts, non-physician transplant professionals, and the general 
    public.
        (2) The Board of Directors shall elect an Executive Committee from 
    the membership of the Board. The Executive Committee shall include at 
    least one general public member, one OPO representative, approximately 
    50 percent transplant surgeons and transplant physicians, and at least 
    25 percent transplant candidates, transplant recipients, organ donors, 
    and family members.
    * * * * *
        (d) Effective date. The organization designated by the Secretary as 
    the OPTN shall have until June 30, 2000, or six months from its initial 
    designation as the OPTN, whichever is later, to meet the requirements 
    of this section, except that the Secretary may extend such period for 
    good cause.
        5. Amend Sec. 121.4 as follows:
        a. Revise paragraph (a)(3)(i).
        b. Revise paragraph (a)(3)(ii).
        c. Revise paragraph (b)(2).
        d. Revise paragraph (c).
        e. Revise paragraph (d).
        f. Amend paragraph (e) introductory text by adding the word 
    ``shall'' after the words ``implement policies and'', and by revising 
    the word ``them.'' in paragraph (e)(1) to read ``them; and''.
        The revisions read as follows:
    
    [[Page 56659]]
    
    Sec. 121.4.  OPTN policies: Secretarial review and appeals.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) * * *
        (i) Ensuring that payment of the registration fee is not a barrier 
    to listing for patients who are unable to pay the fee;
        (ii) Procedures for transplant hospitals to make reasonable efforts 
    to obtain from all available sources, financial resources for patients 
    unable to pay such that these patients have an opportunity to obtain a 
    transplant and necessary follow-up care;
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (2) Provide to the Secretary, at least 60 days prior to their 
    proposed implementation, proposed policies it recommends to be 
    enforceable under Sec. 121.10 (including allocation policies). These 
    policies will not be enforceable until approved by the Secretary. The 
    Board of Directors shall also provide to the Secretary, at least 60 
    days prior to their proposed implementation, proposed policies on such 
    other matters as the Secretary directs. The Secretary will refer 
    significant proposed policies to the Advisory Committee on Organ 
    Transplantation established under Sec. 121.12, and publish them in the 
    Federal Register for public comment. The Secretary also may seek the 
    advice of the Advisory Committee on Organ Transplantation established 
    under Sec. 121.12 on other proposed policies, and publish them in the 
    Federal Register for public comment. The Secretary will determine 
    whether the proposed policies are consistent with the National Organ 
    Transplant Act and this part, taking into account the views of the 
    Advisory Committee and public comments. Based on this review, the 
    Secretary may provide comments to the OPTN. If the Secretary concludes 
    that a proposed policy is inconsistent with the National Organ 
    Transplant Act or this part, the Secretary may direct the OPTN to 
    revise the proposed policy consistent with the Secretary's direction. 
    If the OPTN does not revise the proposed policy in a timely manner, or 
    if the Secretary concludes that the proposed revision is inconsistent 
    with the National Organ Transplant Act or this part, the Secretary may 
    take such other action as the Secretary determines appropriate, but 
    only after additional consultation with the Advisory Committee on the 
    proposed action.
        (c) The OPTN Board of Directors shall provide the membership and 
    the Secretary with copies of its policies as they are adopted, and make 
    them available to the public upon request. The Secretary will publish 
    lists of OPTN policies in the Federal Register, indicating which ones 
    are enforceable under Sec. 121.10 or subject to potential sanctions of 
    section 1138 of the Social Security Act. The OPTN shall also 
    continuously maintain OPTN policies for public access on the Internet, 
    including current and proposed policies.
        (d) Any interested individual or entity may submit to the Secretary 
    in writing critical comments related to the manner in which the OPTN is 
    carrying out its duties or Secretarial policies regarding the OPTN. Any 
    such comments shall include a statement of the basis for the comments. 
    The Secretary will seek, as appropriate, the comments of the OPTN on 
    the issues raised in the comments related to OPTN policies or 
    practices. Policies or practices that are the subject of critical 
    comments remain in effect during the Secretary's review, unless the 
    Secretary directs otherwise based on possible risk to the health of 
    patients or to public safety. The Secretary will consider the comments 
    in light of the National Organ Transplant Act and the regulations under 
    this part and may consult with the Advisory Committee on Organ 
    Transplantation established under Sec. 121.12. After this review, the 
    Secretary may:
        (1) Reject the comments;
        (2) Direct the OPTN to revise the policies or practices consistent 
    with the Secretary's response to the comments; or
        (3) Take such other action as the Secretary determines appropriate.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 121.5  [Amended]
    
        6. Amend Sec. 121.5 as follows:
        a. In paragraph (a), add the words``, consistent with the OPTN's 
    criteria under Sec. 121.8(b)(1),'' after the word ``individuals''.
        b. In paragraph (b), revise the words ``national list'' to read 
    ``waiting list''.
        c. In paragraph (c), revise the words ``national list'' to read 
    ``waiting list'' and add the phrase ``calculated to cover (together 
    with contract funds awarded by the Secretary) the reasonable costs of 
    operating the OPTN and shall be'' after the words ``amount of such fee 
    shall be'.
        7. Paragraph (b) of Sec. 121.6 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 121.6  Organ procurement.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) HIV. The OPTN shall adopt and use standards for preventing the 
    acquisition of organs from individuals known to be infected with human 
    immunodeficiency virus.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 121.7  [Amended]
    
        8. Paragraph (d) of Sec. 121.7 is amended by revising the words 
    ``paragraph (b) of this section'' to read ``paragraph (b)(2) of this 
    section'.
        9. Revise Sec. 121.8 to read as follows:
    
    
    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
    
    [[Page 56660]]
    
    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;
        (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 
    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 February 15, 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.
        10. Amend Sec. 121.9 as follows:
        a. Amend paragraph (a)(1) by removing the words ``and Medicaid'' 
    after the word ``Medicare''.
        b. Amend paragraph (a)(2)(vi) by adding a comma after the word 
    ``radiology''.
        c. Amend paragraph (a)(2)(vii) by adding a comma after the word 
    ``recipients''.
        d. Revise paragraph (a)(3).
        The revision reads as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 121.9  Designated transplant program requirements.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) Be a transplant program in a Department of Veterans Affairs,
    
    [[Page 56661]]
    
    Department of Defense, or other Federal hospital.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 121.10  [Amended]
    
        11. Amend paragraph (c)(1) of Sec. 121.10 by removing the word 
    ``or'' before the words ``termination of an OPO's reimbursement'', and 
    by adding the words ``, or such other compliance or enforcement 
    measures contained in policies developed under Sec. 121.4'' after the 
    words ``Social Security Act''.
        12. Amend Sec. 121.11 as follows:
        a. Revise paragraph (a)(1)(i) by removing the word ``national'' 
    after the word ``computerized''.
        b. Revise paragraph (b)(1)(iv).
        c. Amend paragraph (b)(2) by adding the words ``costs and'' before 
    the word ``performance''.
        The revision reads as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 121.11  Record maintenance and reporting requirements.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (1) * * *
        (iv) Make available to the public timely and accurate program-
    specific information on the performance of transplant programs. This 
    shall include free dissemination over the Internet, and shall be 
    presented, explained, and organized as necessary to understand, 
    interpret, and use the information accurately and efficiently. These 
    data shall be updated no less frequently than every six months (or such 
    longer period as the Secretary determines would provide more useful 
    information to patients, their families, and their physicians), and 
    shall include risk-adjusted probabilities of receiving a transplant or 
    dying while awaiting a transplant, risk-adjusted graft and patient 
    survival following the transplant, and risk-adjusted overall survival 
    following listing for such intervals as the Secretary shall prescribe. 
    These data shall include confidence intervals or other measures that 
    provide information on the extent to which chance may influence 
    transplant program-specific results. Such data shall also include such 
    other cost or performance information as the Secretary may specify, 
    including but not limited to transplant program-specific information on 
    waiting time within medical status, organ wastage, and refusal of organ 
    offers. These data shall also be presented no more than six months 
    later than the period to which they apply;
    * * * * *
        13. Sec. 121.12 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 121.12  Advisory Committee on Organ Transplantation.
    
        The Secretary will establish, consistent with the Federal Advisory 
    Committee Act, the Advisory Committee on Organ Transplantation. The 
    Secretary may seek the comments of the Advisory Committee on proposed 
    OPTN policies and such other matters as the Secretary determines.
    
    [FR Doc. 99-27456 Filed 10-18-99; 9:46 am]
    BILLING CODE 4160-15-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/1/1998
Published:
10/20/1999
Department:
Health Resources and Services Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
99-27456
Dates:
The final rule published on April 2, 1998, 63 FR 16296, adding 42 CFR part 121 with an effective date of October 1, 1998, as amended on July 1, 1998, 63 FR 35847, did not take effect under section 213(a) within Public Law 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681, 2681-359 through 2681-360, approved October 21, 1998. The April 2, 1998 rule as amended by this document, is effective on November 19, 1999.
Pages:
56650-56661 (12 pages)
PDF File:
99-27456.pdf
CFR: (20)
42 CFR 121.8(a)(7)
42 CFR 121.9(a)(3)
42 CFR 121.9(a)
42 CFR 121.8(b)(1)
42 CFR 121.8(b)(2)
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