4.5 Article

Pancreas utilization rates in the UK - an 11-year analysis

Journal

TRANSPLANT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 34, Issue 7, Pages 1306-1318

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.1111/tri.13876

Keywords

acceptance criteria; allocation process; centers variation; pancreas clinical; pancreas discard; pancreas transplantation

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Utilization of pancreases for transplantation remains lower than other organs, with a significant number of solid pancreases being discarded. Better graft assessment at retrieval could minimize unnecessary organ travel and discards, and closer links with islet programmes may allow for better utilization of discarded grafts.
Utilization of pancreases for transplantation remains inferior to that of other organs. Herein, we analysed UK pancreas discards to identify the reasons for the low utilization rates. Data on all pancreases offered first for solid organ transplantation between 1st January 2005 and 31st December 2015 were extracted from the UK Transplant Registry. The number of organs discarded, reasons and the time point of discard were analysed. A centre specific comparison was also undertaken. 7367 pancreases were offered first for solid organ transplantation. 35% were donors after circulatory death (DCD). 3668 (49.7%) organs were not retrieved. Of the 3699 pancreases retrieved, 38% were initially accepted but subsequently discarded. 2145 (29%) grafts offered were transplanted as simultaneous pancreas-kidney or solitary pancreas. 1177 (55%) were transplanted on the first offer whilst the remaining 968 were transplanted after a median of three offers. 52% DBD pancreases were accepted and transplanted on the first offer compared with 68% DCD grafts. There were significant differences in discard rates between centres (30-80% for DBD and 3-78% for DCD, P < 0.001). A significant number of solid pancreases are discarded. Better graft assessment at retrieval could minimize unnecessary organ travel and discards. Closer links with islet programmes may allow for better utilization of discarded grafts.

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