| Literature DB >> 24222842 |
Susanne L Lindell1, Heather Muir, John Brassil, Martin J Mangino.
Abstract
Purpose. Kidneys from DCD donors represent a significant pool, but preservation problems exist. The study objective was to test the importance of machine type for hypothermic preservation of DCD kidneys. Methods. Adult Beagle dog kidneys underwent 45 minutes of warm in situ ischemia followed by hypothermic perfusion for 24 hours (Belzer-MPS Solution) on either an ORS LifePort or a Waters RM3 using standard perfusion protocols. Kidneys were then autotransplanted, and renal function was assessed over 7 days following contralateral nephrectomy. Results. Renal vascular resistance was not different between the two pumps. After 24 hours, the oxygen partial pressure and oxygen delivery in the LifePort perfusate were significantly lower than those in the RM3 but not low enough to change lactate production. TheLifePort ran significantly colder than RM3 (2° versus 5°C). The arterial pressure waveform of the RM3 was qualitatively different from the waveform of the LifePort. Preservation injury after transplantation was not different between the devices. When the LifePort was changed to nonpulsatile flow, kidneys displayed significantly greater preservation injury compared to RM3. Conclusions. Both LifePort and RM3 can be used for hypothermic machine perfusion preservation of DCD kidneys with equal outcomes as long as the duty cycle remains pulsatile.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24222842 PMCID: PMC3810436 DOI: 10.1155/2013/802618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transplant ISSN: 2090-0007
Figure 1Machine perfusion characteristics of DCD kidneys pumped on a Waters RM3 or an ORS LifePort device for 24 hours. Mean perfusion pressure (a), vascular resistance during perfusion (b), average perfusate temperature (c), initial and end perfusate pO2 values (d), end of perfusion delivery of oxygen (DVO2) (e), and end of perfusion perfusate lactate concentrations (f) values are mean ± S.D., *P < 0.05 relative to LifePort, n = 8 per group.
Figure 2Samples of arterial pressure waveforms from a Waters RM3 and an ORS Lifeport during perfusion preservation.
Figure 3Daily serum creatinine values after kidney autotransplantation after DCD donation. Kidneys were perfused for 24 hours using the LifePort (Open Squares) or the RM3 (Solid Circles). Values are mean ± S.D. and represent 8 dogs per group (Figure 3(a)). Similar data (Figure 3(b)) are shown for a LifePort operated under either constant pressure (nonpulsatile flow) or pulsatile flow conditions (both at 30 mm Hg). The values are statistically different between the first 3 corresponding post-operative days. The survival in the pulsatile and nonpulsatile groups were 100% (8/8) and 50% (2/4), respectively (P = 0.09).