| Literature DB >> 30741327 |
Geert Meyfroidt1, Jan Gunst2, Ignacio Martin-Loeches3, Martin Smith4, Chiara Robba5, Fabio Silvio Taccone6, Giuseppe Citerio7,8.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To provide a practical overview of the management of the potential organ donor in the intensive care unit.Entities:
Keywords: Brain death; Organ donor; Organ transplantation; Tissue and Organ procurement
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30741327 PMCID: PMC7095373 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-019-05551-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1Overview of the sympathetic storm and the pro-inflammatory cascade caused by devastating brain injury with brain stem ischemia. As brain damage progresses and intracranial pressure rises to the point where cerebral perfusion is impaired, progressive ischemic damage through the entire brain and brain stem will cause hypothalamic activation of the autonomic system (so-called autonomic storm), characterized by a systemic stress response with increase in circulating catecholamines. Hemodynamic repercussions: Activation of alpha-1-adrenergic receptors causes vasoconstriction and increased arterial blood pressure (first phase of the Cushing reflex). The circulating high levels of catecholamines can lead to increased oxygen consumption, arrhythmias and cardiac injury. As a result of activation of baroreceptors in the aortic arch and damage to brain stem vasomotor nuclei with loss of peripheral vascular tone, parasympathetic activation leads to hypotension, reduced cardiac contractility, and bradycardia (second phase of the Cushing reflex). Respiratory repercussions: The acute increase in intracranial pressure and the consequent catecholamine release and generalized inflammatory response produces a transient increase in systemic intravascular pressure that damages the alveolar epithelial cells and increases pulmonary capillary permeability to protein. The respiratory system is then vulnerable to further inflammatory insults (the so-called “second hit”) caused by mechanical stress induced by mechanical ventilation activating a vicious circle where the respiratory function may worsen damage of the central nervous system
Diagnostic criteria for central diabetes insipidus
| Clinical feature | Diagnostic finding |
|---|---|
| Increased urine volume | Urine output > 3–4 L/day or > 2.5–3.0 mL/kg/h |
| Hypernatremia | Serum sodium concentration > 145 mmol/L |
| Normal or increased serum osmolality | Serum osmolality > 305 mmol/kg |
| Inappropriately dilute urine | Urine osmolality < 200 mmol/kg or specific gravity < 1.005a |
aWhilst waiting for laboratory tests, a simple, but not 100% reliable, bedside test of urine specific gravity (SG) may be useful. In the presence of high urine output and high serum sodium, urine SG < 1.005 is suggestive of diabetes insipidus
Commonly used drug regimens for endocrine management of the brain-dead organ donor
| Hormone/drug | Dose | Remark | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thyroid hormone | |||
| Thyroxine (T4) | 20 µg IV bolus | Precursor of T3 | More organs procured in observational studies [ |
| 10 µg/h IV maintenance | Low intrinsic biological activity | No proof in benefit in RCTs [ | |
| Increased conversion into inactive rT3 | |||
| Slow onset | |||
| Triiodothyronine (T3) | 4 µg IV bolus | Active hormone | More organs procured in observational studies [ |
| 3 µg/h IV maintenance | Rapid onset | No proof in benefit in RCTs [ | |
| May trigger arrhythmias | |||
| Corticosteroid | |||
| Methylprednisolone | 1000 mg IV od | Monitor blood glucose levels | Improved donor hemodynamics, increased organ procurement. and improved graft and recipient survival in some observational studies [ |
| OR | Only after blood sampling for tissue typing | Mixed results from RCTs, largely neutral [ | |
| 15 mg/kg IV od | |||
| OR | |||
| 250 mg IV bolus | |||
| 100 mg/h IV maintenance | |||
| Hydrocortisone | 50 mg IV bolus | Monitor blood glucose levels | Lower vasopressor need in observational study, without difference in organ procurement rate [ |
| 10 mg/h IV maintenance | Only after blood sampling for tissue typing | No RCT evidence | |
| OR | |||
| 300 mg/d IV | |||
| Insulin | Continuous IV infusion | Frequently measure blood glucose | Supported by observational studies [ |
| Adjust dose to preset target blood glucose | At least avoid severe hyperglycaemia and large blood glucose fluctuations | No RCT evidence in this population | |
IV intravenous, od once daily, RCT randomized controlled trial, rT3 reverse-T3
Routine infection screening for potential organ donors
| Clinical assessment |
| Physical examination |
| Medical and social history |
| Travel |
| Animals |
| Environmental |
| Sexual |
| Intravenous drug abuse |
| Chest radiograph |
| Routine laboratory |
| White blood cell count |
| CRP |
| Cultures: bacterial and fungi |
| Blood cultures |
| Urine cultures for kidney donors |
| Broncho-alveolar lavage for lung donors |
| Viral serology |
| CMV, HIV, HSV antibody |
| HBV surface antigen, core antibody, surface antibody |
| HCV antibody |
| VZV antibody |
| Other serology |
| Toxoplasma antibody |
| Syphilis screening: RPR |
| Tuberculosis screening |
| Purified protein or interferon-gamma |
| Strong suspicion based on medical/social history |
| NAT for HIV, HBV, HCV |
| Strong suspicion based on stay in endemic areas or areas with epidemiological exposure |
| Strongyloides serology |
| Coccidioides serology |
| Trypanosoma serology |
| Blastomyces serology |
| HEV serology |
| Cryptococcus antigen |
| WNV antibody |
| Zika NAT |
This table was build based on references [8, 59, 61, 62]
CMV cytomegalovirus, HBV hepatitis B virus, HCV hepatitis C virus, HEV hepatitis E virus, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, HSV herpes simplex virus, WNV West Nile virus, VZV varicella zoster virus, CRP C-reactive protein, NAT nucleic acid amplification test, RPR rapid plasma reagin
The most important (potential) organ-protective therapies in the brain-dead donor, at a glance
| Organ-protective therapy | Evidence of an effect on the numbers of organs retrieved, or improved organ function in the donor? |
|---|---|
| Hemodynamic management | |
| Low-dose dopamine (4 µg/kg/min) in kidney donors | One small RCT, reduced need for dialysis in kidney recipients [ |
| Other inotropes or vasopressors | Observational data |
| Fluid and electrolyte management | |
| Goal-directed fluid management | One RCT, prematurely stopped; not superior to conventional therapy [ |
| Crystalloid solutions: NaCl 0.9% or Ringer’s lactate | Observational data |
| Avoid the use of starches | One prospective cohort study, propensity score-corrected; independent predictor of DGF [ |
| Diabetes insipidus treatment: desmopressin or vasopressin | Extrapolation from evidence in non-brain-dead critically ill patients |
| Respiratory management | |
| Lung-protective ventilation and recruitment manoeuvres | One RCT, prematurely stopped; increased number of eligible and harvested lungs [ |
| Endocrine management | |
| Thyroid hormone in hemodynamically unstable donors | Observational data; higher number of procured organs [ |
| Four double blind placebo-controlled RCTs; no evidence of benefit [ | |
| Corticosteroid treatment | 14 observational trials; most suggest some form of benefit [ |
| 11 RCTs, poor quality, many confounders; all but one are neutral [ | |
| Temperature management | |
| Maintain body T° 34°–35° | One RCT; lower incidence of DGF in kidney recipients, compared to 36, 5°–37, 5° [ |
| Maintain body T° > 35° | Legal requirement in many countries |
| Blood transfusion and coagulation management | |
| RBC transfusion trigger unknown | Observational data |
| Keep INR < 1.5 and platelet count > 50,000/mm3 | Observational data, single-centre practice [ |
| LMWH prophylaxis | Extrapolation from evidence in non-brain-dead critically ill patients |
| Infection management | |
| Screen the donor for infections | International guidelines, based on epidemiological data [ |
| HIV-positive donor may donate to HIV positive receptor | One prospective non-randomized cohort study; similar outcomes compared to non-HIV [ |
| Donation from HCV positive donor | One prospective observational study (HTx); DAAs reduce viral load [ |
| One prospective observational study (KTx); prophylactic DAAs reduce viral load [ | |
RCT randomized controlled trial, DGF delayed graft function, RBC red blood cell, INR international normalized ratio, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, HCV hepatitis C virus, HTx heart transplant, KTx kidney transplant, DAA direct anti-viral agent
| A concise and critical overview of the essential elements in the management of the brain-dead donor. |