What is living organ donation?
Living organ donation is an opportunity to save a life by giving one of your kidneys or part of your liver to someone who needs it. While many donors and recipients know each other, either as family, friends, acquaintances, co-workers or neighbors, there are also donors who decide to donate an organ to a stranger in need. If you are considering donation, our experts at MedStar Georgetown Transplant Institute are here to help.
Can I really donate a kidney or liver while alive?
Most people are born with two kidneys, but can lead a long, normal life with one. In liver transplantation, a portion of the donor's liver is removed and transplanted in the recipient. Donor safety and recipient’s benefit are our top priorities. Because of the liver’s unique ability to regenerate, both the donor and recipient's liver grows back to almost normal size several weeks after transplantation.
Read our living liver donor brochure.Why is living donation necessary?
Unfortunately, the wait for a deceased donor organ can be three to five years or longer for a kidney, and six months or longer for a liver. During this time, many potential recipients will get sicker and no longer be candidates, or even die while they are waiting. A living donor organ is very high quality, and can be scheduled in a very short amount of time. Living donation gets recipients transplanted quicker with outstanding results.
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Living donation for kidney disease
For people with renal disease, the kidneys no longer function. Eventually, a person with kidney failure will require dialysis, a very disruptive and difficult way to live. While dialysis can perform some of the kidney’s functions, an even better alternative is to be listed for a kidney transplant. Compared to dialysis, kidney transplantation has been proven to increase the length and quality of the recipient’s life. -
Living donation for liver disease
Likewise, when a patient experiences liver failure, the liver no longer functions properly. Eventually, the patient may require a liver transplant to stay alive. For liver patients, there is no alternative, like dialysis, so sometimes transplant is done urgently to save the person’s life. Nowadays, many liver tumors (both primary and metastatic) can be treated with liver transplantation. Living donor provides the unique opportunity to perform these transplants right at the perfect timing, without intervening with other treatments, such as chemotherapy or radiation.
Our transplant program at MedStar Georgetown Transplant Institute is nationally known as a leader in organ transplantation and has the highest volume and best outcomes of all local programs. Click here for more reasons.
For kidney donors, we are the only D.C. hospital to offer living donor protections through the National Kidney Registry, such as wage and travel reimbursement, and protections should a family member ever need a transplant. Read about these here.
Benefits of living donation
The greatest benefit of living donation is the ability to help someone who is in need of a transplant, relatively quickly, by removing them from the deceased donor waiting list. And we’ve heard from donors that they receive extreme satisfaction with knowing they helped save a life.
Click here for additional benefits.Who can donate?
Any healthy person can potentially donate an organ. You do not need to be genetically related or even know the organ recipient. Donors complete an initial questionnaire, and then undergo an extensive evaluation with lab work to make sure they are a suitable candidate. Donor safety is always our top priority and the transplant team will discuss any possible risks with potential donors.
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Morgan brothers
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Baby Brandon
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Laurel and Gary
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Bernie and Wanda
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What are the benefits of living donation?
- Most recipients wait on the kidney transplant wait list three to five years and on the liver transplant list for six months or more. With a living donor, surgery can be scheduled within weeks.
- Organs from living donors experience fewer episodes of rejection.
- Organs from living donors typically last longer than organs from deceased donors.
- Recipients receiving a transplant from a living donor can better prepare for surgery knowing well in advance when the transplant will take place.
- The transplant can take place at a time that is convenient for both the donor and the recipient.
- Living kidney donation may enable the recipient to stop dialysis sooner or avoid starting dialysis altogether.
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- We have one of the most experienced transplant teams and highest volume programs:
- More than 340 deceased and living donor kidney transplants a year
- More than 110 deceased and living donor liver transplants a year
- Our patients have access to some of the foremost organ transplant specialists in the country.
- We transplant more minority patients than most area programs and have the experience to transplant people turned down elsewhere.
- We are one of only a handful of transplant centers to offer the management of recipients with incompatible living donors.
- We have one of the highest volume kidney transplant programs in the United States and this level of experience leads to better outcomes for our patients.
- We are one of the few programs to offer innovative liver transplant options including split and domino transplants.
- Visit SRTR.org and UNOS.org for program comparison.
- We have one of the most experienced transplant teams and highest volume programs:
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What are some common myths about living donation?
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What is a non-directed donor?
Some people just know they want to donate an organ to help someone in need. A non-directed donor is someone who donates without having a specific recipient in mind to donate an organ. This can start a chain of transplants that helps many recipients. -
How long is the donor in the hospital after surgery?
A typical stay is 1-2 days for a kidney donor and 4-7 days for a liver donor. You can expect to return to normal activities relatively quickly. The living donor coordinator will discuss the surgery, recovery and answer any questions you have.