The question presented is whether a division of this court may and should depart from the standard “more likely than not” test for proximate causation in this suit for negligence based on the defendant-appellee’s alleged failure to screen blood donations adequately. Appellant, conceding that he cannot meet the standard test, urges us to “recognize loss of chance as a protected interest” and to apply that alternate test of causation to the Red Cross’s alleged negligence in this case, in much the same way — he contends — as a division did in a prior medical malpractice case,
Ferrell v. Rosenbaum,
I.
In July 1982 Calvin Grant (hereafter “Grant” or “appellant”), then age twelve, underwent surgery at Children’s Hospital in Washington, D.C. to repair a congenital heart defect. During the surgery he received five units of whole blood, which had been provided to Children’s Hospital by appellee the American National Red Cross (the “Red Cross”).
All of the five donors whose blood was used on Grant satisfied the blood screening requirements then utilized by the Red Cross. However, in compliance with the *318 Red Cross’s procedures at the time, none of the blood had been tested for alanine aminotransferase (“ALT”) levels. In September 1993, after a liver biopsy, Grant was found to have the hepatitis C virus. He filed a complaint in the Superior Court charging the Red Cross with negligence in not having screened the blood administered to him during the 1982 surgery for ALT. 1 During the litigation, it was determined that one of the five donors of the donated blood had been positive for hepatitis C. At the Red Cross’s request, blood samples from the positive donor and appellant were tested by means of DNA, and it was confirmed that appellant had been infected with the virus during the 1982 transfusion.
In 1982, when Grant underwent surgery, scientists and doctors were aware that besides hepatitis A and hepatitis B there was a form referred to as “non-A, non-B” (or “NANB”) hepatitis. Although today scientists know that most NANB hepatitis is caused by the hepatitis C virus (“HCV”), that virus was not isolated until 1989, and the first test to screen blood for HCV antibodies was not available until 1990. In his suit Grant asserted, nonetheless, that the Red Cross should have tested all donor blood for ALT levels as a “surrogate test” for NANB hepatitis, 2 because blood containing elevated levels of ALT has an increased chance of carrying the NANB hepatitis virus. According to appellant, at the time of his surgery ALT testing could identify a significant portion (up to 40%) of the blood supply infected with the NANB hepatitis, and — he asserted — the Red Cross itself believed that ALT testing might prevent as many as a third of the expected serious cases of NANB hepatitis cases annually, yet made a “business” (or cost-benefit) decision to forgo the testing.
The Red Cross defended by asserting that in 1982, all of the available data and the practice of national blood suppliers counseled against routine screening by ALT donor testing. It proffered evidence that, according to the consensus of leading experts nationwide, ALT testing would not have detected approximately 70 percent of donors infected with the then-unknown viral agent HCV; that the same percentage of the donors excluded on the basis of ALT testing would have been healthy and not affected by that agent; and that as a result routine ALT testing would have annually excluded many thousands of units of healthy blood from donors not carrying hepatitis, while failing to detect the vast majority of donors carrying NANB hepatitis.
Grant responded by conceding that he could not prove by greater than 50% (more likely than not) that he would not have been infected even if ALT testing had been performed. Specifically, he admitted that his expert testimony would be able to establish no more than a 40 percent correlation between ALT levels and infection with the NANB hepatitis, in part because ALT levels fluctuate in individuals. 3 Grant argued nonetheless — as he does on appeal — that a jury should be allowed to *319 decide whether the Red Cross’s negligence in not screening for elevated ALT levels “deprived] him of an opportunity to avoid” the infection he incurred even if that “opportunity” were measured at less than fifty-percent likelihood. Citing decisions of other courts that have applied the so-called “loss of chance” doctrine, he argued that it was “a jury question whether the Red Cross’s negligent failure to test proximately caused Calvin Grant’s injury by increasing his chances of getting NANB infected blood by at least 30%.” The trial court, on the strength of decisions of this court cited by the Red Cross, concluded as a matter of law that Grant had failed to present triable issues of fact on both negligence and proximate causation. It therefore granted summary judgment to the Red Cross.
II.
On review of summary judgment, this court applies the same standard of appraising the evidence as did the trial court.
Drejza v. Vaccaro,
A.
Although the Red Cross cannot fairly be said to have had a physician-patient relationship with Grant, the parties agree that the applicable standards of causation are drawn from our medical malpractice decisions.
See Ray v. American Nat’l Red Cross,
The evidence is sufficient to establish proximate cause if the expert 4 states an opinion, based on a reasonable degree of medical certainty, that the defendant’s negligence is more likely than anything else to have been the cause (or a cause) of the plaintiffs injuries.
Robinson v. Group Health Ass’n,
Illustrating application of this principle is our decision in
Talley v. Varma, supra,
in which the plaintiff sued her physician for near-total loss of her sense of taste after he had treated her with radiation to remove thyroid tissue that remained following previous surgery to remove her cancerous thyroid gland. The plaintiffs medical expert testified that by administering negligently excessive amounts of radioactive iodine (or 1-131), the physician had “increase[d] the risk of complications such as those experienced by [the plaintiff].”
Grant concedes, as he did in the trial court, his inability to prove that the Red Cross’s assumed negligence more likely than not caused his hepatitis infection, ie., that blood testing for ALT levels would— as a matter of probability — have detected the donor carrying the hepatitis C virus, leading to rejection of that blood donation. Instead Grant urges us to depart from that standard and accept the view of some courts in cases such as this that a plaintiff makes out a triable issue on causation by showing that the defendant’s conduct deprived him of a substantial, though less than fifty percent, chance of a better outcome had due care been exercised. 5 This *321 court’s decisions cited above create a formidable barrier to application of the “loss of chance” doctrine. Indeed, as Grant formulated his position to the trial court— asserting that the Red Cross’s failure to screen for ALT “increas[ed] his chances of getting NANB[-]infected blood by at least 80%” — the argument is virtually the same as the one rejected in Talley v. Varma, supra. Recasting an “increased risk” of injury (Talley) as a “loss of chance” of an injury-free outcome sounds very much like an exercise in semantics.
Grant argues nevertheless that this court has already applied the “loss of chance” doctrine in
Ferrell v. Rosenbaum, supra,
and thereby recognized it as an accurate formulation of the bedrock “direct and substantial” causal nexus standard. Upon analysis, we do not read
Ferrell
as deviating from the basic standard of proof of causation by probability. In that case, the plaintiff sued her physician and hospital for misdiagnosing her infant child’s potentially fatal blood disorder of Fanconi anemia. She proffered evidence that the child’s best hope of survival into adulthood had been through a bone marrow transplant from a compatible donor sibling. Indeed, her expert witness would have testified that, according to recent scientific reports,
“70 to 90 percent
of Fanco-ni anemia patients can be cured of their hematological disease if transplanted with a matched sibling at an early age.”
Id.
at 651 n. 16 (emphasis added). The plaintiffs theory was that the defendants’ negligence in misdiagnosing the child’s condition deprived her of the opportunity she would have seized — but which she later lost through circumstances — to bear a child or children who could have donated the necessary bone marrow.
6
In reversing summary judgment to the defendants, we acknowledged that “[t]he bare possibility that the Ferrells could have had another child, or children, that could have been a suitable bone marrow donor” would not suffice,
id.
at 650, and that the plaintiffs burden was to prove that the asserted negligence was a “substantial factor” in causing the injury.
Id.
(quoting
Lacy v. District of Columbia,
*322 The “lost chance” recognized in Ferrell was thus the opportunity for the plaintiff to avail herself of a medical procedure with a high likelihood (a 70-90 percent chance) of success if carried out. No similar claim is made in the present case, given Grant’s inability to offer proof that screening blood for ALT levels would have offered a more than thirty-percent-plus chance of detecting a donor’s hepatitis. Ferrell thus synchronizes with the standard of probability required by our decisions, whereas Grant’s proof does not.
Even if
Ferrell
were regarded as easing the burden of proof on causation in some medical malpractice cases, however, we are not convinced that a similar relaxation of proof should apply here. In
Ferrell
the court carefully limited its consideration of lost chance to “a case such as this involving negligent treatment of a potentially fatal condition,”
id.
at 651, in turn illustrating the situation where ‘“the harm [alleged] appears to have been brought about by two or more concurrent causes.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Daniels,
185 U.S.App. D.C. at 92,
Grant’s conceded inability to prove that the Red Cross’s assumed negligence more likely than not caused his injury required the entry of summary judgment for the Red Cross. Accordingly, the judgment of the Superior Court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Initially the complaint sued other actors as well, but it was later voluntarily dismissed as to them.
. A surrogate test, while not testing directly for the causative agent of a disease or its antibodies, may reveal a statistical association between a disease and a particular agent.
. Grant himself had shown normal ALT levels on several occasions despite being infected with the HCV. In her deposition Grant’s expert witness, Dr. Johanna Pindyck, acknowledged that Grant’s chance of not being infected would have improved by "at least 30 percent” had ALT testing been used, but that she could not "say for certain whether it would have been greater than that.” This approximated the affidavit of Dr. Thomas Zuck, past president of the Council of Community Blood Centers, that in 1982 there was "only a 30% chance that the implicated donor would have had an elevated ALT level and his blood discarded” as a result of ALT testing. Similarly, a study performed by the National Institutes of Health at about the same time confirmed that ALT testing "would fail to detect about 70% of the blood that would infect recipients with non-A, non-B hepatitis” (Affidavit of Dr. Paul V. Holland).
. The parties agree that medical expert testimony was necessary in this case to establish both negligence and proximate cause.
See, e.g., Lasley v. Georgetown Univ.,
.
See, e.g., Herskovits v. Group Health Coop.,
The majority of jurisdictions, by contrast, have refused to recognize "loss of chance” as a doctrine lessening required proof of causation.
See, e.g., Weymers v. Khera,
[
. The plaintiff’s expert also proffered that the chances of securing a perfectly matching sibling donor increased' with each additional child she had.
. We earlier had noted that in
Daniels
the Circuit Court, “applying District of Columbia law, rejected the claim that a plaintiff
must conclusively show
that the harm would not still have occurred absent the malpractice.”
. Still another problem with applying the "loss of chance” doctrine is its analytical kinship "with the allocation of damages based on comparative fault, regardless of whether the physician’s negligence is pegged above or below 50 percent in terms of proximate causation.”
Kilpatrick v. Bryant,
[traditional tort law is based on probabilities. If a patient had a 49% chance of dying from an injury or disease and if the patient was negligently treated and dies, full recovery will be permitted because, absent the negligence, it was more likely than not that the patient would have survived. Based on the 51% probability of surviving the injury or disease, we exclude the injury or disease as the cause of death. Damages are not reduced by the fact that there was a strong possibility that the patient would have died absent the negligence. Conversely, if the patient had a 51% chance of dying from an injury or disease, and was negligently treated and died, it was probably the pre-existing medical condition, not the negligence, that killed the patient, and there is no recovery. Damages must be proven by a preponderance of the evidence. Damages are not proven when it is more likely than not that death was caused by the antecedent disease or injury rather than the negligence of the physician.
Fennell, supra
note 5,
