4.2 Article

Evaluation of functional warm ischemia time during controlled donation after circulatory determination of death using normothermic regional perfusion (ECMO-TT): A prospective multicenter cohort study

Journal

ARTIFICIAL ORGANS
Volume 47, Issue 8, Pages 1371-1385

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/aor.14539

Keywords

controlled donation after circulatory determination of death; extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; normothermic regional perfusion; organ transplantation; withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Controlled donation after circulatory determination of death (cDCD) appears to be an effective method to alleviate the global shortage of available organs for transplantation. A multicenter prospective cohort study found an inverse association between functional warm ischemia time (FWIT) and retrieval rates for liver, kidneys, and pancreas. Optimal FWIT thresholds were proposed for each organ.
Background: Controlled donation after circulatory determination of death (cDCD) seems an effective way to mitigate the critical shortage of available organs for transplant worldwide. As a recently developed procedure for organ retrieval, some questions remain unsolved such as the uncertainty regarding the effect of functional warm ischemia time (FWIT) on organs viability. Methods: We developed a multicenter prospective cohort study collecting all data from evaluated organs during cDCD from 2017 to 2020. All the procedures related to cDCD were performed with normothermic regional perfusion. The analysis included organ retrieval as endpoint and FWIT as exposure of interest. The effect of FWIT on the likelihood for organ retrieval was evaluated with Relative distribution analysis. Results: A total amount of 507 organs ' related information was analyzed from 95 organ donors. Median donor age was 62 years, and 63% of donors were male. Stroke was the most common diagnosis before withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy (61%), followed by anoxic encephalopathy (21%). This analysis showed that length of FWIT was inversely associated with organ retrieval rates for liver, kidneys, and pancreas. No statistically significant association was found for lungs. Conclusions: Results showed an inverse association between functional warm ischemia time (FWIT) and retrieval rate. We also have postulated optimal FWIT's thresholds for organ retrieval. FWIT for liver retrieval remained between 6 and less than 11 min and in case of kidneys and pancreas, the optimal FWIT for retrieval was 6 to 12 min. These results could be valuable to improve organ utilization and for future analysis.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available