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  • Title: Liver Grafts From Donors After Circulatory Death on Regional Perfusion With Extended Warm Ischemia Compared With Donors After Brain Death.
    Author: De Carlis R, Di Sandro S, Lauterio A, Botta F, Ferla F, Andorno E, Bagnardi V, De Carlis L.
    Journal: Liver Transpl; 2018 Nov; 24(11):1523-1535. PubMed ID: 30022597.
    Abstract:
    Donation after circulatory death (DCD) in Italy constitutes a relatively unique population because of the requirement of a no-touch period of 20 minutes. The first aim of this study was to compare liver transplantations from donors who were maintained on normothermic regional perfusion after circulatory death and suffered extended warm ischemia (DCD group, n = 20) with those from donors who were maintained on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) and succumbed to brain death (ECMO group, n = 17) and those from standard donors after brain death (donation after brain death [DBD] group, n = 52). Second, we conducted an explorative analysis on the DCD group to identify relationships between the donor characteristics and the transplant outcomes. The 1-year patient survival for the DCD group (95%) was not significantly different from that of the ECMO group (87%; P = 0.47) or the DBD group (94%; P = 0.94). Graft survival was slightly inferior in the DCD group (85%) because of a high rate of primary nonfunction (10%) and retransplantation (15%) but was not significantly different from the ECMO group (87%; P = 0.76) or the DBD group (91%; P = 0.20). Although ischemic cholangiopathy was more frequent in the DCD group (10%), this issue did not adversely impact graft survival because none of the recipients underwent retransplantation due to biliary complications. Moreover, the DCD recipients were more likely to develop posttransplant renal dysfunction with the need for renal replacement therapy. Further analysis of the DCD group showed that warm ischemia >125 minutes and an Ishak fibrosis score of 1 at liver biopsy negatively impacted serum creatinine and alanine transaminase levels in the first posttransplant week, respectively. In conclusion, our findings encourage the use of liver grafts from DCD donors maintained by regional perfusion after proper selection.
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