Complexity and Manipulation of International Kidney Exchange Programmes with Country-Specific Parameters
Abstract
Kidney Exchange Programmes (KEPs) facilitate the exchange of kidneys, and larger pools of recipient-donor pairs tend to yield proportionally more transplants, leading to the proposal of international KEPs (IKEPs). However, as studied by mincu2021ip, practical limitations must be considered in IKEPs to ensure that countries remain willing to participate. Thus, we study IKEPs with country-specific parameters, represented by a tuple , restricting the selected transplants to be feasible for the countries to conduct, e.g., imposing an upper limit on the number of consecutive exchanges within a country's borders. We provide a complete complexity dichotomy for the problem of finding a feasible (according to the constraints given by ) cycle packing with the maximum number of transplants, for every possible . We also study the potential for countries to misreport their parameters to increase their allocation. As manipulation can harm the total number of transplants, we propose a novel individually rational and incentive compatible mechanism Morder. We first give a theoretical approximation ratio for Morder in terms of the number of transplants, and show that the approximation ratio of Morder is asymptotically optimal. We then use simulations which suggest that, in practice, the performance of Morder is significantly better than this worst-case ratio.
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