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Prevention of Trafficking in Organs, Tissues, and Cells

Martin, Dominique E. ; Capron, Alexander M. ; Fadhil, Riadh A.S. ; Forsythe, John L.R. ; Padilla, Benita ; Pérez-Blanco, Alicia ; Van Assche, Kristof ; Bengochea, Milka ; Cervantes, Lilia and Forsberg, Anna LU , et al. (2024) In Transplantation
Abstract

Trafficking in human organs, cells, and tissues has long been a source of concern for health authorities and professionals, and several international ethical guidance documents and national laws have affirmed the prohibition of trade in these substances of human origin (SoHOs). However, despite considerable attention to the issue of organ trafficking, this remains a substantial and widespread problem internationally. In contrast, trafficking in cells, tissues, and medical products derived from SoHOs has received comparatively little attention, and the extent and nature of such trafficking remain largely unknown. Consequently, as part of the 2023 Global Summit on Convergence in Transplantation held in Santander, Spain, an ethics working... (More)

Trafficking in human organs, cells, and tissues has long been a source of concern for health authorities and professionals, and several international ethical guidance documents and national laws have affirmed the prohibition of trade in these substances of human origin (SoHOs). However, despite considerable attention to the issue of organ trafficking, this remains a substantial and widespread problem internationally. In contrast, trafficking in cells, tissues, and medical products derived from SoHOs has received comparatively little attention, and the extent and nature of such trafficking remain largely unknown. Consequently, as part of the 2023 Global Summit on Convergence in Transplantation held in Santander, Spain, an ethics working group was assigned the task of formulating actionable recommendations to support the prevention of trafficking in all SoHOs. In reporting on this work, we review factors that may influence the persistent trafficking of SoHOs, explore the potential difficulties associated with the collection and reporting of data about suspected trafficking activities, and argue that more practical and consistent guidance, training, and regulatory frameworks are needed internationally to support effective reporting, sharing of data, and collaborative responses to suspected trafficking cases. We also discuss the importance of psychosocial evaluation of living donors as a strategy to detect and prevent organ trafficking and strive to advance the implementation of this well-established recommendation by outlining minimum standards for psychosocial evaluation of living donors.

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Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
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Transplantation
publisher
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
external identifiers
  • scopus:85208646801
  • pmid:39437366
ISSN
0041-1337
DOI
10.1097/TP.0000000000005212
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
3a0d1d9a-2043-4065-a5b2-578a06df300a
date added to LUP
2025-02-18 09:45:09
date last changed
2025-07-09 08:31:59
@article{3a0d1d9a-2043-4065-a5b2-578a06df300a,
  abstract     = {{<p>Trafficking in human organs, cells, and tissues has long been a source of concern for health authorities and professionals, and several international ethical guidance documents and national laws have affirmed the prohibition of trade in these substances of human origin (SoHOs). However, despite considerable attention to the issue of organ trafficking, this remains a substantial and widespread problem internationally. In contrast, trafficking in cells, tissues, and medical products derived from SoHOs has received comparatively little attention, and the extent and nature of such trafficking remain largely unknown. Consequently, as part of the 2023 Global Summit on Convergence in Transplantation held in Santander, Spain, an ethics working group was assigned the task of formulating actionable recommendations to support the prevention of trafficking in all SoHOs. In reporting on this work, we review factors that may influence the persistent trafficking of SoHOs, explore the potential difficulties associated with the collection and reporting of data about suspected trafficking activities, and argue that more practical and consistent guidance, training, and regulatory frameworks are needed internationally to support effective reporting, sharing of data, and collaborative responses to suspected trafficking cases. We also discuss the importance of psychosocial evaluation of living donors as a strategy to detect and prevent organ trafficking and strive to advance the implementation of this well-established recommendation by outlining minimum standards for psychosocial evaluation of living donors.</p>}},
  author       = {{Martin, Dominique E. and Capron, Alexander M. and Fadhil, Riadh A.S. and Forsythe, John L.R. and Padilla, Benita and Pérez-Blanco, Alicia and Van Assche, Kristof and Bengochea, Milka and Cervantes, Lilia and Forsberg, Anna and Gracious, Noble and Herson, Marisa R. and Kazancioǧlu, Rümeyza and Müller, Thomas and Noël, Luc and Trias, Esteve and López-Fraga, Marta}},
  issn         = {{0041-1337}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Lippincott Williams & Wilkins}},
  series       = {{Transplantation}},
  title        = {{Prevention of Trafficking in Organs, Tissues, and Cells}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/TP.0000000000005212}},
  doi          = {{10.1097/TP.0000000000005212}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}