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Volume 31, Number 12—December 2025

Research Letter

Wild and Domestic Animal Exposure among Deceased Persons Referred for Organ Procurement, United States

Author affiliation: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA (D.W. McCormick, P. Annambhotla, R.M. Wallace, S.C. Bonaparte, L.A. Hicks, S.V. Basavaraju, I. Kracalik); Health Resources and Services Administration, Rockville, Maryland, USA (R. Lynch, B. Doby, S. Laskey)

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Abstract

Rabies is transmissible through transplantation. Wild mammal bites or scratches carry a high risk for rabies, but their frequency among organ donors is unknown. During 2024, an estimated 12 (95% CI 7–20; 0.07%) of 16,989 deceased US donors had high-risk exposures. Identifying such exposures can mitigate rabies transmission to transplant recipients.

Rabies is a rare and nearly universally fatal infectious disease, primarily transmitted through the saliva of an infected mammal. Human-to-human transmission of rabies is rare and usually is associated with organ or tissue transplantation (13). In January 2025, the 7th US death from transplant-transmitted rabies since 1978 was reported in a kidney transplant recipient (4). The organ donor had a documented skunk exposure, prompting a national review of transplant-associated rabies risk. Additional screening of potential donors with animal bites or scratches could help mitigate the risk for rabies disease transmitted by organ transplantation. Wild animal exposures confer higher risk for rabies than domestic animal exposure (5). We estimated the annual number of US organ donors who had mammal bites, scratches, or both.

Next of kin provide information on prospective donors during a required deceased donor risk assessment interview (DRAI). Seven organ procurement organizations (OPOs) serving rural and urban settings in 7 of the 10 US Department of Health and Human Services regions (regions 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, and 10) provided data on animal exposures collected using the DRAI for 4,555 persons referred for organ procurement during 2024 (Table). We defined an animal exposure as receipt of a bite or scratch within 12 months before referral for organ procurement. We determined the need for postexposure prophylaxis (PEP) among transplant recipients by using an online risk stratification tool (https://kellycharniga.shinyapps.io/RabiesRiskTool) to assess whether rabies PEP was indicated for recipients of organs from donors with wild mammal exposures (5).

We categorized persons referred for organ procurement who meet suitability criteria as ruled-in persons. Not all persons referred for organ procurement meet suitability criteria for donation, and persons who do not meet those criteria do not become organ donors. We defined persons referred for organ procurement but who did not meet other suitability criteria as ruled-out persons. The overall national number of persons ruled in for organ procurement from whom organs are not procured is unknown.

Among 4,555 referred persons, 244 (5.4%) had a documented animal exposure, of which 4 (0.09%) were wild mammals (2 rats, 1 raccoon, and 1 porcupine). Of the 4,555 referred persons, 2,872 (63.1%) were ruled in for organ procurement by the OPOs after medical review, of whom 154 (5.4%) had a documented animal exposure, which is comparable to the proportion of animal exposures among persons ruled out for donation (90/1,683 [5.3%]) (Table). Because rabies only affects mammals, we excluded 3 nonmammalian animal exposures (parakeet, spider, and wasp).

Overall, among the 2,872 persons ruled in for organ donation, 151 (5.3%) had an animal exposure, of which 149 (98.7%) were domestic mammals and 2 (1.3%) were wild mammals (both rats). PEP was indicated for the porcupine and raccoon exposures in persons ruled out. The circumstances in which rabies PEP would be indicated for a bite or scratch from a rat would depend on whether the rat was provoked or unprovoked and if it was apparently healthy, ill, or acting strangely (5).

Extrapolating the findings from the 2,872 ruled-in persons to 16,989 deceased donors in 2024 (6), we estimated that 881 (5.2% [95% CI 825–938]) deceased donors would have a domestic mammal exposure and an additional 12 (0.07% [95% CI 7–20]) deceased donors would have a wild mammal exposure annually. On the basis of those estimates, domestic mammal exposures were common among deceased donors in the United States, whereas wild mammal exposures were rare. In our analysis, we estimated 9 deceased donors have wild mammal exposures annually, although those exposures might not be recognized at the time of procurement or be identified in the DRAI because next of kin might have poor recall. The frequency of unrecognized animal exposure, including exposure to bats (7), cannot be estimated by our analysis. Feral cats are the most frequently recognized source of rabies among domestic animals (8,9). Although no reports of exposure to feral cats among referred donors were in the provided data, exposure to feral cats should prompt further rabies assessment among persons referred for organ procurement.

Animal exposure is not a contraindication to organ procurement; however, prior transmission events demonstrate that donor exposures to wild mammals carry a risk for rabies to recipients and warrant further preventive interventions (13). Prompt administration of PEP can prevent rabies in transplant recipients (13). When high-risk animal exposure is identified in an organ donor, OPOs should consider contacting infectious disease specialists and public health officials to assess rabies risk and determine whether PEP or other mitigation strategies are indicated among recipients. Such measures are critical to mitigating potential transplant-associated rabies transmission.

Dr. McCormick is a medical officer in the Office of Blood, Organ, and Other Tissue Safety, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia. His research interests include transplant-associated infections and improving the safety of organ and tissue transplantations and blood transfusions.

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References

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Table

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Suggested citation for this article: McCormick DW, Lynch R, Doby B, Laskey S, Annambhotla P, Wallace RM, et al. Wild and domestic animal exposure among deceased persons referred for organ procurement, United States. Emerg Infect Dis. 2025 Dec [date cited]. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid3112.251486

DOI: 10.3201/eid3112.251486

Original Publication Date: December 12, 2025

Table of Contents – Volume 31, Number 12—December 2025

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David McCormick, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road NE, Mailstop H16-2, Atlanta, GA 30329-4018, USA

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Page created: November 20, 2025
Page updated: December 12, 2025
Page reviewed: December 12, 2025
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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