
WASHINGTON (AP) — Organ donations from the recently deceased dropped last year for the first time in over a decade, resulting in fewer kidney transplants, according to an analysis issued Wednesday that pointed to signs of public mistrust in the lifesaving system.
More than 100,000 people in the U.S. are on the list for an organ transplant. The vast majority of them need a kidney, and thousands die waiting every year.
The nonprofit Kidney Transplant Collaborative analyzed federal data and found 116 fewer kidney transplants were performed last year than in 2024. That small difference is a red flag because the analysis traced the decline to some rare but scary reports of patients prepared for organ retrieval despite showing signs of life.
Those planned retrievals were stopped and the U.S. is developing additional safeguards for the transplant system, which saves tens of thousands of lives each year. But it shook public confidence, prompting some people to remove their names from donor lists.
Dr. Andrew Howard, who leads the Kidney Transplant Collaborative, said last year’s dip in kidney transplants would have been larger except for a small increase — about 100 — in transplants from living donors, when a healthy person donates one of their kidneys to someone in need. The collaborative advocates for increased living donations, which make up a fraction of the roughly 28,000 yearly kidney transplants.
With the exception of 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic was raging, organ transplants have been rising year-to-year. Last year’s decline in deceased donors didn’t translate into fewer transplants overall: There were just over 49,000 compared with 48,150 in 2024. Transplants of hearts, livers and lungs continued to see gains, according to federal data. Howard said that was likely due to differences in how various organs are evaluated and allocated for transplant.
The Association of Organ Procurement Organizations wasn’t involved in Wednesday’s analysis but expressed alarm, calling on its members, hospitals and federal regulators “to unite in restoring public trust and strengthening this critical system.”
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
The Specialty of Cleaning up: Change Your Space and Brain - 2
Surveys of 6 Hot Savvy Beds - 3
New Jordan security fence could be done in early 2028 - 4
Evidence of lost baptismal rite stage uncovered in Byzantine era cathedral near Sea of Galilee - 5
Alix Earle built trust by sharing her acne woes. Now her skin care line is raising questions.
Iran war drives global fertilizer prices up, raising food cost fears
Amy Poehler's podcast is a hit. It's also a Trojan horse for talking about women and aging.
‘The White Lotus’ sparked online interest in risky anxiety pills, study says
Spanish woman, 25, dies by legal euthanasia in case that drew national spotlight
James Webb Space telescope spots 'big red dot' in the ancient universe: A ravenous supermassive black hole named 'BiRD'
10 times the sky amazed us in 2025
This Canadian crater looks like marbled meat | Space photo of the day for Jan. 6, 2026
What's the Fate of 5G Innovation?
Jersey's wellbeing score is below UK and France













