| Literature DB >> 24152541 |
Julika Loss1, Karl P Drewitz, Hans J Schlitt, Martin Loss.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most offered pancreases are not transplanted. This study investigates the factors that inform and influence the transplant surgeon's decision to select an offered pancreas.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24152541 PMCID: PMC4016525 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2482-13-47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Surg ISSN: 1471-2482 Impact factor: 2.102
Interview guide
| • How long have you been working as a transplant surgeon in a responsible position? | |
| • Are you currently performing pancreas recoveries as well? | |
| • If a pancreas is offered to your center, what is the usual process? | |
| • When deciding about a pancreas offer from Eurotransplant, what criteria guide your decision? | |
| - | |
| • How relevant is the macroscopic evaluation performed by the recovery team? | |
| • How important is it for you that the donor and recipient match well? | |
| • How might your decision be influenced if you are told that the organ has been previously refused by other centers? | |
| • Have you ever heard that pancreases have been refused due to capacity reasons or even witnessed it personally? | |
| • Could you imagine that under certain circumstances, a pancreas might be refused due to infrastructure reasons in your clinic, e.g. due to staff shortage? Has that ever happened? |
1P-PASS = pre-procurement pancreas allocation suitability score, combining nine donor parameters, e.g. age, body mass index, ICU stay, and (nor)adrenaline use. The DRI (donor risk index), an alternative prognostic score for pancreas transplantation, is not commonly used in Germany and was therefore not included explicitly in the interview guide.
Figure 1Categories of criteria that play a role when deciding to accept/reject a pancreas.
Basis of the assessment of medical donor characteristics
| 1) International literature | 3/14 | |
| 2) Hospital guidelines | 2/14 | |
| 3) Peer custom | 2/14 | |
| 4) Personal clinical experience | 4/14 | |
*The numbers do not add up to 14, because not every interview supplied sufficient information to allow for a clear categorization. In addition, 2 interviewees were coded for 2 categories, because they relied on the scientific literature, but also considered their clinical experience.
Handling the pancreas assessment of the recovery team
| 1) | The interviewee adopts the assessment of the recovery team | 3/14 | |
| 2) | The interviewee adopts the assessment only if he knows and trusts the recovery surgeon | 3/14 | |
| 3) | The interviewee does not rely on the assessment of the recovery team. He prefers to accept the organ in (almost) any case and assess it personally | 6/14 | |
*The numbers do not add up to 14, because not every interview supplied sufficient information to allow for clear categorization.