| Literature DB >> 22206616 |
Ari R Joffe1, Joe Carcillo, Natalie Anton, Allan deCaen, Yong Y Han, Michael J Bell, Frank A Maffei, John Sullivan, James Thomas, Gonzalo Garcia-Guerra.
Abstract
Many believe that the ethical problems of donation after cardiocirculatory death (DCD) have been "worked out" and that it is unclear why DCD should be resisted. In this paper we will argue that DCD donors may not yet be dead, and therefore that organ donation during DCD may violate the dead donor rule. We first present a description of the process of DCD and the standard ethical rationale for the practice. We then present our concerns with DCD, including the following: irreversibility of absent circulation has not occurred and the many attempts to claim it has have all failed; conflicts of interest at all steps in the DCD process, including the decision to withdraw life support before DCD, are simply unavoidable; potentially harmful premortem interventions to preserve organ utility are not justifiable, even with the help of the principle of double effect; claims that DCD conforms with the intent of the law and current accepted medical standards are misleading and inaccurate; and consensus statements by respected medical groups do not change these arguments due to their low quality including being plagued by conflict of interest. Moreover, some arguments in favor of DCD, while likely true, are "straw-man arguments," such as the great benefit of organ donation. The truth is that honesty and trustworthiness require that we face these problems instead of avoiding them. We believe that DCD is not ethically allowable because it abandons the dead donor rule, has unavoidable conflicts of interests, and implements premortem interventions which can hasten death. These important points have not been, but need to be fully disclosed to the public and incorporated into fully informed consent. These are tall orders, and require open public debate. Until this debate occurs, we call for a moratorium on the practice of DCD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22206616 PMCID: PMC3313846 DOI: 10.1186/1747-5341-6-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Philos Ethics Humanit Med ISSN: 1747-5341 Impact factor: 2.464
Clarification of the arguments surrounding the interpretation of the 'irreversibility' of death.
| Absent circulation is irreversible at 2-10 minutes | Absent circulation is not irreversible at 2-10 minutes |
|---|---|
| Permanent is a reasonable 'construal' of irreversible. | The ordinary meaning of irreversible is 'not capable of being reversed.' Permanent is not a 'construal' of irreversible at all. |
| There is a moral/legal obligation not to resuscitate. | Irreversible is not a moral/legal concept. The obligation to or not to resuscitate is due to the patient being alive. Death is a state of a body, and those in exact states cannot be both dead and alive. |
| There is no difference in outcome by waiting for irreversibility. | This admits that permanence is a prognosis of death, not a diagnosis of death. The DCD donor is living (even if he/she may be dying). |
| Autoresuscitation does not occur after 65 seconds of absent circulation. | This is based on inadequate data (n = 5), and tries to explain away the Lazarus phenomenon. |
| Permanence accords with accepted medical standards and the intent of the law. | This is misleading and inaccurate. This ignores ontologic and moral issues. This mischaracterizes accepted medical standards. The intent of the law was not 'permanence'. |
| Brain death is not required to diagnose death. | The intent of the law is that there is only one death per person. DCD donors are not brain dead. |
Case series claimed to document lack of autoresuscitation.
| Study (year) | n | Selection criteria | Monitoring > 2 min* | AL | Cont obs | Author's conclusions | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stroud et al (1947) [ | 23 | "When practical, the electrodes were attached to the moribund patient before clinical death... tracings were taken intermittently or continuously until the string became motionless." Age 10-87 yr; 1 child age 10 yr. | stated for n = 2 (adults) | 0 | not stated | "Permanent standstill occurred without VF in 50% of cases." | n = 2 not monitored at death, leaving a true n = 21. |
| Enselberg (1952) [ | 43 | "EKGs were recorded for varying lengths of time before, during, and after death... resuscitative measures were applied in 22 cases." Age 8-80 yr; 2 children ages 8 yr and 14 yr. | not stated | 0 | not stated | "Recurring asystoles or ventricular standstills are common and often appear to be self-limited." | "It is possible that in many cases the recording of terminal EKGs may have been stopped upon the appearance of a long asystole, before true cessation." |
| Robinson (1912) [ | 7 | "EKG records obtained from 7 patients before and during the actual stoppage of the heart... There were naturally many failures to obtain records, especially when fatalities occurred suddenly." Age 9 mo-37 yr; 3 children ages 9 mo, 18 mo, and 4 yr. | stated for n = 1 (age 9 mo) | 0 | not stated | "Cardiac activity continued from 6-35 min after all the usual clinical signs of death had occurred." | -Case 5 had resumption of cardiac rhythm at a rate of 33 bpm "after a stoppage of 2 1/2 minutes." |
| Willius | 6 | "... six patients in whom almost continuous EKG records were obtained from 10 min to 7 hr 32 min preceding death." Age 29-58 yr (based on information for n = 4). | not stated (4), several minutes (1), 1 min 3.04 sec(1). | 0 | not stated | "The changes occurring in the mechanism of the human heart preceding and during death are variable..." | - |
| Rodstein et al 1970 [ | 31 | "A series of aged individuals in whom terminal EKGs and necropsies were available... Lead II was then continuously recorded until electrical activity ceased... The time of cessation of electrical activity- electrical death- was recorded. Where clinically indicated, the usual resuscitative measures were employed." Ages 73-101 yr. | stated for n = 1. | 0 | not stated | "The majority of deaths from all causes showed an EKG pattern of the dying heart..." In review of the literature they report "survival times after clinical death [of up to 50 min]." | "In 7 (23%) of the 31 patients, electrical death terminated in VF... One patient terminated with a rapid VT." |
| TOTAL | 110 | Selection criteria poorly described. | n = 5 | n = 0 | not stated | variable terminal EKG patterns | cannot determine if autoresuscitation occurs |
AL: arterial line; EKG: electrocardiogram; VF: ventricular fibrillation. Cont obs: continuous observation. *Monitoring > 2 min: refers to ongoing EKG monitoring for > 2 min after death was pronounced based on EKG asystole or VF. This Table is modified and reproduced with permission of the author, and was originally published in [37].
Selected reported cases of autoresuscitation.
| Author | Age (yr) | Diagnosis | Rhythm | Min* | Outcome | EKG | AL | Obs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Letellier [ | 80 | Pulmonary edema | asystole | 5 | normal | + | - | + |
| Voekkel [ | 55 | Sudden death | asystole | 7 | death at 3 d | + | - | + |
| MacGillivray [ | 76 | COPD | asystole | 5 | death 24 hr later | + | - | + |
| Rosengarten [ | 36 | asthma | EMD | 5 | normal | + | - | + |
| Abdullah [ | 93 | sepsis | asystole | 5 | not stated | + | ? | + |
| Al-Ansari [ | 63 | COPD | asystole | 3 | normal | + | - | + |
| Frolich [ | 67 | MI | asystole | 5 | normal d3; death d7 | + | + | + |
| Casielles-Garcia [ | 94 | hemorrhage | EMD | 3 | death at 18 d | + | + | + |
| Maleck [ | 80 | sepsis | asystole | < 5 | death at d2 | + | + | + |
| Quick [ | 70 | hyperkalemia | asystole | 8 | normal | - | - | + |
| Ben-David [ | 66 | sudden VF | asystole | 10 | normal | - | - | + |
| Monticelli [ | 78 | MI | asystole | > 10 | death at 19 hr | - | - | + |
Monitoring of the patient is either present (+) or absent (-); the mode of monitoring is by continuous electrocardiogram (ECG), arterial line (AL), and/or continuous clinical bedside observation (Obs). COPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; EMD: electromechanical dissociation; MI: myocardial infarction; VF: ventricular fibrillation. *Min: time in minutes from stopping resuscitation in the stated rhythm to return of circulation.
This Table is modified and reproduced with permission of the author, and was originally published in [37].
Increased concerns with the practice of uncontrolled donation after cardiocirculatory death.
| Area of concern | Examples |
|---|---|
| The decision to withdraw life support is independent of the DCD decision. | The decision to stop CPR is not independent of organ donation. As soon as CPR is stopped, it is clear that organ donation procedures will start. The decision to stop CPR is therefore a decision whether to attempt to save the life versus identify the patient as a donor. |
| Informed consent is obtained for DCD. | Consent is not truly informed. First, a signed donor card is a legally binding and irrevocable decision, but unlikely informed [ |
| Absent circulation for 2-10 minutes is permanent, and therefore is diagnostic of death. | The IOM claims that a "hands off period could be very brief and may even be unnecessary" [ |
| Death declaration conforms with accepted medical standards and with the intent of the law. | The accepted medical standard when using ECMO to rescue a patient during failed CPR is to cool the patient for 24 hours, then slowly re-warm, and then assess prognosis cautiously. |
The Organ Donation Breakthrough Collaborative Best Practices, and Conflict of Interests.
| Category | Page | |
|---|---|---|
| Job Security | Hiring, supervision, and recognition are linked to performance [rates of consent]. | v, 10, 30 |
| Accountability among hospital staff may be driven by hospital administration... Hold their staff accountable to performance. | v, 11-12 | |
| Regularly track performance, and use data systems to track results at the staff member and organizational levels. Staff are held accountable. | v. 30 | |
| Healthy Competition | Reporting data by ICU fosters a healthy competition among units. | 11 |
| Nurses reported that this sense of competition led to improvement in referrals and consents. | 63 | |
| Call Early | Nurses automatically look at the white board to see if any patients look like potential donors. | viii, 44 |
| Conduct regular rounds in high potential ICUs... They are the most likely OPO personnel to identify potential donor cases early; they raise hospital staff awareness... | 44, | |
| In house coordinators interacted with families as extensions of hospital nursing staff... OPO staff do not "hover" waiting for organs but do discretely monitor the patient's condition. | 14, 56 | |
| He is already thinking about organ donation upon the arrival of certain types of patients in the emergency room. | 55 | |
| Goal is "yes" | Getting to an informed "yes" is paramount. | ix, 29, 57 |
| Bordering on coercion | Assigns only those nurses [champions] to potential donor cases. | 56, 58 |
| Importance of 'setting the stage' for consent well ahead of the declaration... becoming familiar with family dynamics and establishing a relationship with the key family decision-makers... bringing the family food and blankets... this type of 'surveillance' information was reported to be extremely useful in tailoring approaches to families for consent. | 57, 58 | |
| [Use the requestor] with the strongest connection or bond with the family... and has a history of achieving families' consent to donate. | 58 | |
| Presenting the donation request as a personal story, giving examples of transplant recipients. | 61 | |
| Proximity to transplant recipients as an opportunity to heighten the immediacy of need for organ donation. | 68 | |
| Incentives | Often given incentives to perform well: compensation, bonuses, performance reviews... Financial incentives for achieving these targets [consents per year]... | 11, 23 |
| Sessions at times 'when staff are hungry'... and bring more than enough food to serve all attendees. | 42, 49 | |
| Distributes pens, notepads, and mugs. | 44 | |
| Invites physicians, residents, and nurses to baseball games, hockey games, annual dinners and other outings to maintain buy-in, strengthen relationships, and recognize high performance. | 49, 51 | |
| Visit high-referring ICUs with dinner... sent the physician a box of his favorite cigars. | 49 | |
| Business model | Strategically recruits high profile members of business and civic community to sit on the board of governors... Strategically appoints top officials from high donor potential hospital to its board... Strategically select influential, potentially pro-donation hospital personnel to serve on their boards... they do expect them to be champions for organ donation and accessible to the OPO for immediate as well as longer-term needs for facilitating organ donation. | 20, 37, 45 |
| Orient operations towards outcomes rather than processes. | 28 | |
| If you secure doctors of high stature, it will facilitate mid-level doctor support. | 47 | |
| They serve as a 'committee of ears'... | 47 |
Consensus statements regarding donation after cardiocirculatory death from prominent medical groups, and some comments.
| Consensus Group | Funding | Stated Goal | Examples of concerns |
|---|---|---|---|
| National Conference on DCD, 2006 [ | Transplant organizations | "To address the increasing experience of DCD and to affirm the ethical propriety of transplanting organs from such donors...[and] to expand the practice of DCD in the continuum of quality end-of-life care." | 1. "By new developments not previously reported, the conference resolved controversy regarding the period of circulatory cessation that determines death and allows administration of pre-recovery pharmacologic agents." These new developments were not described nor referenced. |
| Interdisciplinary panel, 2010 [ | Transplant organization | "To re-examine the standards for death determination and to analyze the new protocols' compliance with these standards." | 1. Claim that death is "fundamentally a medical practice issue and not primarily a moral or ontological issue [[ |
| Institute of Medicine, 1997 [ | Transplant organization | "This report examines medical and ethical issues in recovering organs from NHBDs who do not meet the standard of brain death." | 1. Accepted the premise "at the outset [that] recovery of organs from NHBDs should be considered a reasonable source of organs whose potential deserves serious exploration... It can be concluded, therefore, that the recovery of organs from NHBDs is an important, medically effective and ethically acceptable approach to closing the gap...[p45-46]" |
| Institute of Medicine, 2000 [ | Transplant organization | "An effort designed to facilitate the adoption by all OPOs of protocols regarding NHBD." | 1. Did not re-address the determination of death. Affirmed two different types of death: "the UDDA specifies the irreversible loss of all brain function |
| Institute of Medicine, 2006 [ | Transplant organization | "To study the issues involved in increasing the rates of organ donation." | 1. Did not re-address the determination of death. Claimed that 'permanent' is "a reasonable interpretation of the concept of 'irreversibility' and is compatible with the probable intentions of the Commission that formulated the UDDA definition and with the UDDA's reference to 'accepted medical standards' [p172]." |
| SCCM Ethics Committee, 2001 [ | Unclear | "To comment on the issues of timing of death." | 1. Suggest a long observation time for certification of |
| Canadian Forum, 2006 [ | Transplant organization | "To inform and guide health care professionals involved in developing programs for DCD... Discussion at the forum was restricted to optimal and safe practice in the field as it pertains to DCD." | 1. Presentations were heart "by experts from international jurisdictions where DCD is currently practiced [pS2]." Adopted "a weaker interpretation" of irreversible, apparently simply echoing the IOM and SCCM reports. |
Concerns with policies on donation after cardiocirculatory death in children's hospitals in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico [142].
| Topic of concern | Examples | % of protocols |
|---|---|---|
| Death determination | Pulselessness can be determined by palpation alone (a highly inaccurate method [ | 14% |
| No specification of method to determine pulselessness. | 11% | |
| No specification of duration of absent circulation until organ harvest. | 10% | |
| Fewer than 5 minutes of absent circulation until organ harvest. | 10% | |
| Conflicts of interest | Transplant personnel are precluded from declaring death. | 88% |
| Transplant personnel are excluded from premortem donor management. | 51% | |
| Physicians caring for potential organ recipients are excluded from participating in premortem donor management or declaration of donor death. | 32% | |
| If the family raises a question about organ donation, donation after cardiocirculatory death can be discussed with the family prior to a withdrawal of life support decision. | 21% | |
| Premortem interventions | Premortem interventions are prohibited. | 3% |
| Premortem heparin is used. | 55% | |
| Premortem vasodilator(s) are used. | 18% | |
| Premortem vessel cannulation is used. | 36% | |
| Consent is required for premortem interventions. | 75% | |
| Palliative care of donor | Medication intended to hasten death is precluded. | 44% |
| Withdrawal of life support occurs only in the operating room. | 54% | |
| Of those having withdrawal of life support in the operating room, the family is allowed to remain until death is declared. | 48% | |
| The family is permitted to view the body after organ removal. | 27% | |
| Voluntariness of consent | The family can withdraw consent at any time. | 16% |