Once you and the transplant team decide a transplant is the best option, your child will be placed on the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN) list as a potential transplant recipient. OPTN is responsible for organ distribution for transplant in conjunction with the local Organ Procurement Organization (OPO), and it oversees the allocation of many different types of organs.
How the list works
Children waiting for a transplant receive “points” for several factors. These points include:
- How long they have been waiting, severity of the recipient’s condition
- The closeness of the match with an available organ
- The location of the transplant center in relation to the donor location
Each organ has slightly different criteria for matching with a recipient. We will send your child’s data to OPTN and update them with condition changes that may affect your child's spot on the waiting list.
When an organ becomes available, a computer searches the list and ranks all candidates in order of their total number of points. The organ is offered to the candidate with the most points. If the match isn’t right, or if it’s not the right time for the patient to receive a transplant, the organ is offered to the next candidate on the list.
Preparing your child and your family
Waiting is often the most difficult stage of the journey, but your transplant team is here to offer our physical and emotional support.
While you wait, we'll work closely with you to monitor your child and make certain that they remain a transplant candidate. Remember that maintaining normalcy, eating healthy, and staying active to help prepare for surgery and for recovery is important for your child.
A donor may become available anytime. When we contact you to come to the hospital once a match has been made, timing is critical — you will need to arrive as quickly as possible. We often go into the operating room within hours of your arrival.