Left-Digit Bias and Deceased Donor Kidney Utilization.

2021 
Cognitive biases shown to impact medical decision-making include left-digit bias, the tendency to focus on a continuous variable's leftmost digit. We hypothesized that left-digit bias impacts deceased donor kidney utilization through heuristic processing of donor age and creatinine. We used United States registry data to identify 87,019 kidneys recovered (2015-2019) and compared the proportion around thresholds for donor age (69 vs 70 years) and creatinine (1.9 vs 2.0mg/dL), then compared the risk of kidney discard. Kidneys from donors aged 70 vs 69 years were more frequently discarded (77% vs 65%, p<0.001), with higher risk of discard even after adjusting for KDRI (adjusted RR 1.11, 95%CI 1.02-1.21, p=0.018). Similarly, kidneys from donors with final creatinine 2.0 versus 1.9mg/dL were more frequently discarded (37% vs 29%, p<0.001), with higher risk of discard after adjusting for KDRI (adjusted RR 1.19, 95%CI 1.07-1.33, p=0.001). However, no significant left-digit effect was found when examining other donor age (39/40, 49/50, 59/60 years) or creatinine (0.9/1.0, 2.9/3.0mg/dL) thresholds. The findings suggest a possible left-digit effect affecting kidney utilization at specific thresholds. Additional investigations of impact of this and other heuristics on organ utilization are needed to identify potential areas for decision-making interventions aimed at reducing kidney discard.
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