Literature DB >> 24268427

Uncontrolled organ donation after circulatory determination of death: US policy failures and call to action.

Stephen P Wall1, Kevin G Munjal2, Nancy N Dubler3, Lewis R Goldfrank4.   

Abstract

In the United States, more than 115,000 patients are wait-listed for organ transplants despite that there are 12,000 patients each year who die or become too ill for transplantation. One reason for the organ shortage is that candidates for donation must die in the hospital, not the emergency department (ED), either from neurologic or circulatory-respiratory death under controlled circumstances. Evidence from Spain and France suggests that a substantial number of deaths from cardiac arrest may qualify for organ donation using uncontrolled donation after circulatory determination of death (uDCDD) protocols that rapidly initiate organ preservation in out-of-hospital and ED settings. Despite its potential, uDCDD has been criticized by panels of experts that included neurologists, intensivists, attorneys, and ethicists who suggest that organ preservation strategies that reestablish oxygenated circulation to the brain retroactively negate previous death determination based on circulatory-respiratory criteria and hence violate the dead donor rule. In this article, we assert that in uDCDD, all efforts at saving lives are exhausted before organ donation is considered, and death is determined according to "irreversible cessation of circulatory and respiratory functions" evidenced by "persistent cessation of functions during an appropriate period of observation and/or trial of therapy." Therefore, postmortem in vivo organ preservation with chest compressions, mechanical ventilation, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation is legally and ethically appropriate. As frontline providers for patients presenting with unexpected cardiac arrest, emergency medicine practitioners need be included in the uDCDD debate to advocate for patients and honor the wishes of the deceased.
Copyright © 2013 American College of Emergency Physicians. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24268427     DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2013.10.014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Emerg Med        ISSN: 0196-0644            Impact factor:   5.721


  4 in total

1.  Uncontrolled Donation After Circulatory Determination of Death Donors (uDCDDs) as a Source of Lungs for Transplant.

Authors:  T M Egan; J J Requard
Journal:  Am J Transplant       Date:  2015-04-14       Impact factor: 8.086

Review 2.  Donation after circulatory death donors in lung transplantation.

Authors:  Thomas M Egan; Benjamin E Haithcock; Jason Lobo; Gita Mody; Robert B Love; John Jacob Requard; John Espey; Mir Hasnain Ali
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2021-11       Impact factor: 3.005

Review 3.  Ethics in extracorporeal life support: a narrative review.

Authors:  Alexandra Schou; Jesper Mølgaard; Lars Willy Andersen; Søren Holm; Marc Sørensen
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2021-07-21       Impact factor: 9.097

4.  Similar 5-Year Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate Between Kidney Transplants From Uncontrolled and Controlled Donors After Circulatory Death-A Dutch Cohort Study.

Authors:  Hessel Peters-Sengers; Jaap J Homan van der Heide; Martin B A Heemskerk; Ineke J M Ten Berge; Fred C W Ultee; Mirza M Idu; Michiel G H Betjes; Arjan D van Zuilen; Maarten H L Christiaans; Luuk H Hilbrands; Aiko P J de Vries; Azam S Nurmohamed; Stefan P Berger; Frederike J Bemelman
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  2017-06       Impact factor: 4.939

  4 in total

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