A model for deceased-donor transplant queue waiting times

被引:0
作者
Steve Drekic
David A. Stanford
Douglas G. Woolford
Vivian C. McAlister
机构
[1] University of Waterloo,Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science
[2] Western University,Department of Statistical & Actuarial Sciences
[3] Wilfrid Laurier University,Department of Mathematics
[4] Western University,Department of Surgery
来源
Queueing Systems | 2015年 / 79卷
关键词
Abandonments; Competing risks; Estimation; Liver transplantation; Phase-type distribution; Quasi-birth-and-death process; Reneging; 60K25; 90B22;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In many jurisdictions, organ allocation is done on the basis of the health status of the patient, either explicitly or implicitly. This paper presents a self-promoting priority queueing model for patient waiting times which takes into account changes in health status over time. In this model, most patients arrive as “regular” customers to the queue, but as the health of a patient degrades, their status is promoted to “priority” to reflect the increased urgency of the transplant. We model the queueing system as a level-dependent quasi-birth-and-death process, and the steady-state joint queue length distribution as well as the marginal delay distributions for each queue are computed via the use of matrix analytic techniques. The model is calibrated using liver transplantation wait-list data, provided by a regional health centre in Canada, which tracked approximately 1,100 patients over nearly 13 years. Blood-type-specific models are fit and performance measures, such as the mean and distribution of the time until transplant, are obtained and compared to empirical estimates calculated using the raw data.
引用
收藏
页码:87 / 115
页数:28
相关论文
共 67 条
  • [1] Abellán JJ(2006)Analysis of the renal transplant waiting list in the País Valencià (Spain) Stat. Med. 25 345-358
  • [2] Armero C(2008)ABO blood group-related waiting list disparities in liver transplant candidates: effect of the MELD adoption Transplantation 85 844-849
  • [3] Conesa D(2004)Utility of MELD and Child–Turcotte–Pugh scores and the Canadian waitlisting algorithm in predicting short-term survival after liver transplant Clin. Investig. Med. 27 162-167
  • [4] Pérez-Panadés J(1995)Calculating the equilibrium distribution in level dependent quasi-birth-and-death processes Stoch. Models 11 497-525
  • [5] Martínez-Beneito MA(1984)Finite birth-and-death models in randomly changing environments Adv. Appl. Probab. 16 715-731
  • [6] Zurriaga O(2010)The ‘blood group O problem’ in kidney transplantation: time to change? Nephrol. Dial. Transplant. 25 1998-2004
  • [7] García-Blasco MJ(2005)The impact of self-generation of priorities on multi-server queues with finite capacity Stoch. Models 21 427-447
  • [8] Vanaclocha H(2007)Influence of blood group on mortality and waiting time before heart transplantation in the United Kingdom: implications for equity of access J. Heart Lung Transplant. 26 30-33
  • [9] Barone M(2005)On a queueing system with self generation of priorities Neural Parallel Sci. Comput. 13 119-130
  • [10] Avolio AW(2008)MAP/(PH/PH)/ Stoch. Anal. Appl. 26 1250-1266