Dieter P Hoyer1, Zoltan Mathé, Anja Gallinat, Ali C Canbay, Juergen W Treckmann, Ursula Rauen, Andreas Paul, Thomas Minor. 1. 1 General, Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, University Hospital Essen, Essen, Germany. 2 Clinic for Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University Hospital Essen, Essen, Germany. 3 Institute of Physiological Chemistry, University Hospital Essen, Essen, Germany. 4 Surgical Research Division, University Hospital Bonn, Bonn, Germany.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Abrupt temperature shift from hypothermia to normothermia incurred on reperfusion of organ grafts has been delineated as a genuine factor contributing to reperfusion injury and graft dysfunction after transplantation. METHODS: In a first clinical series of 6 patients, cold-stored livers, all allocated by the rescue offer mechanism by Eurotransplant, were subjected to machine-assisted slow controlled oxygenated rewarming (COR) for 90 minutes before engrafting. A historical cohort of 106 patients basically similar in graft (all rescue offer organs) and recipient factors was used for comparison. RESULTS: The clinical benefit of COR was documented by a significant reduction by approximately 50% in peak serum transaminases after transplantation compared to untreated controls (AST 563.5 vs. 1204 U/L, P = 0.023). After 6 months graft survival was 100% in the COR group and 80.9% in the controls (P = 0.24). Respective patient survival was 100% and 84.7% (P = 0.28). Real-time assessment of glucose concentration in the perfusion solution correlated well with postoperative synthetic graft function (r = 0.78; P < 0.02). All treated recipients had normal liver function after a 6-month follow-up and are well and alive. CONCLUSIONS: This first clinical application suggests that controlled graft rewarming after cold storage is a feasible and safe method in clinical praxis and might become an adjunct in organ preservation.
BACKGROUND: Abrupt temperature shift from hypothermia to normothermia incurred on reperfusion of organ grafts has been delineated as a genuine factor contributing to reperfusion injury and graft dysfunction after transplantation. METHODS: In a first clinical series of 6 patients, cold-stored livers, all allocated by the rescue offer mechanism by Eurotransplant, were subjected to machine-assisted slow controlled oxygenated rewarming (COR) for 90 minutes before engrafting. A historical cohort of 106 patients basically similar in graft (all rescue offer organs) and recipient factors was used for comparison. RESULTS: The clinical benefit of COR was documented by a significant reduction by approximately 50% in peak serum transaminases after transplantation compared to untreated controls (AST 563.5 vs. 1204 U/L, P = 0.023). After 6 months graft survival was 100% in the COR group and 80.9% in the controls (P = 0.24). Respective patient survival was 100% and 84.7% (P = 0.28). Real-time assessment of glucose concentration in the perfusion solution correlated well with postoperative synthetic graft function (r = 0.78; P < 0.02). All treated recipients had normal liver function after a 6-month follow-up and are well and alive. CONCLUSIONS: This first clinical application suggests that controlled graft rewarming after cold storage is a feasible and safe method in clinical praxis and might become an adjunct in organ preservation.
Authors: Richard W Laing; Ricky H Bhogal; Lorraine Wallace; Yuri Boteon; Desley A H Neil; Amanda Smith; Barney T F Stephenson; Andrea Schlegel; Stefan G Hübscher; Darius F Mirza; Simon C Afford; Hynek Mergental Journal: Transplantation Date: 2017-11 Impact factor: 4.939
Authors: Reinier J de Vries; Shannon N Tessier; Peony D Banik; Sonal Nagpal; Stephanie E J Cronin; Sinan Ozer; Ehab O A Hafiz; Thomas M van Gulik; Martin L Yarmush; James F Markmann; Mehmet Toner; Heidi Yeh; Korkut Uygun Journal: Nat Protoc Date: 2020-05-20 Impact factor: 13.491
Authors: Simon Moosburner; Igor M Sauer; Frank Förster; Thomas Winklmann; Joseph Maria George Vernon Gassner; Paul V Ritschl; Robert Öllinger; Johann Pratschke; Nathanael Raschzok Journal: Hepatol Commun Date: 2020-12-05