BACKGROUND: Cold preservation, reperfusion damage, immunosuppressive drugs, and uremia-induced acquired thrombophilias increase the risk of thrombotic complications in renal transplantation. Intragraft fibrin deposition may be associated with delayed graft function. METHODS: We studied coagulation and fibrinolysis in 45 patients of a larger trial in renal transplantation: perioperative antithymocyte globulin (group A, n=15), perioperative basiliximab (group B, n=16), and conventional triple therapy (group C, n=14). Blood samples for prothrombin fragment F1+2, plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI)-1, d-dimer, tPA antigen, tPA activity, and platelet counts were obtained simultaneously at 1 and 5 min after reperfusion from iliac artery and graft vein for calculation of transrenal changes. Because antithymocyte globulin activates coagulation and fibrinolysis, group A was analyzed separately. Groups B and C were pooled (group BC). RESULTS: In group BC, transrenal D-dimer release occurred at 1 min, tPA-antigen release at 1 and 5 min, and transrenal PAI-1 uptake at 5 min postreperfusion. tPA activity increased marginally only at 1 min. High graft tPA-antigen release at 5 min and D-dimer release at 1 min were associated with delayed graft function. In group A, transrenal tPA-antigen release occurred at 1 and 5 min and D-dimer release at 1 min. There were no transrenal F1+2 changes in either group. CONCLUSION: Although graft PAI-1 uptake inhibits tPA activity, graft releases D-dimer at early reperfusion without concomitant F1+2 release. Data suggest thrombin and fibrin formation already before cold preservation during donor care and organ retrieval. This fibrin deposition increases risk of delayed graft function.
BACKGROUND: Cold preservation, reperfusion damage, immunosuppressive drugs, and uremia-induced acquired thrombophilias increase the risk of thrombotic complications in renal transplantation. Intragraft fibrin deposition may be associated with delayed graft function. METHODS: We studied coagulation and fibrinolysis in 45 patients of a larger trial in renal transplantation: perioperative antithymocyte globulin (group A, n=15), perioperative basiliximab (group B, n=16), and conventional triple therapy (group C, n=14). Blood samples for prothrombin fragment F1+2, plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI)-1, d-dimer, tPA antigen, tPA activity, and platelet counts were obtained simultaneously at 1 and 5 min after reperfusion from iliac artery and graft vein for calculation of transrenal changes. Because antithymocyte globulin activates coagulation and fibrinolysis, group A was analyzed separately. Groups B and C were pooled (group BC). RESULTS: In group BC, transrenal D-dimer release occurred at 1 min, tPA-antigen release at 1 and 5 min, and transrenal PAI-1 uptake at 5 min postreperfusion. tPA activity increased marginally only at 1 min. High graft tPA-antigen release at 5 min and D-dimer release at 1 min were associated with delayed graft function. In group A, transrenal tPA-antigen release occurred at 1 and 5 min and D-dimer release at 1 min. There were no transrenal F1+2 changes in either group. CONCLUSION: Although graft PAI-1 uptake inhibits tPA activity, graft releases D-dimer at early reperfusion without concomitant F1+2 release. Data suggest thrombin and fibrin formation already before cold preservation during donor care and organ retrieval. This fibrin deposition increases risk of delayed graft function.
Authors: Carson B Walker; Hunter B Moore; Trevor L Nydam; Alexander C Schulick; Hillary Yaffe; James J Pomposelli; Michael Wachs; Thomas Bak; Kendra Conzen; Megan Adams; Thomas Pshak; Rashikh Choudhury; Michael P Chapman; Elizabeth A Pomfret; Peter Kennealey Journal: Am J Surg Date: 2020-08-27 Impact factor: 2.565