| Literature DB >> 31292740 |
Karim Hamaoui1, Vassilios Papalois2.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Pancreas transplantation enables complete patient independence from exogenous insulin administration and increases both patient survival and quality of life. Despite this, there has been a decline in pancreas transplantation for the past 20 years, influenced by changing donor demographics with more high-risk extended criteria (ECD) and donation after cardiac death (DCD) donors. This review discusses whether the advent of machine perfusion (MP), if extended to the pancreas, can increase the pool of suitable donor organs. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Donor pools; Extended criteria donor; Graft preconditioning; Machine perfusion; Organ preservation; Pancreas; Viability assessment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31292740 PMCID: PMC6620253 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-019-1165-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 4.810
Fig. 1Proven and theoretical benefits of machine perfusion compared with static cold storage in pancreas preservation
Summary of recent studies of pancreatic machine perfusion
| Author | Country | Model type | Perfusion protocol | Outcome/viability measures | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypothermic machine perfusion studies | |||||
| Hamaoui [ | UK | Porcine DCD and human DBD pancreas | Low pressure with UW solution for 5 h then normothermic reperfusion to assess viability | During HMP: perfusion dynamics, histology, microdialysis; during normothermic reperfusion: perfusion dynamics, insulin secretion, exocrine secretion, histology, microdialysis | Successful perfusion at low pressures demonstrated no deleterious histological or oedematous effect; reperfusion assessment demonstrated viable stable perfusion and evidence of maintained insulin secretion to glucose stimulus and endocrine viability. |
| Leemkuil [ | Netherlands | Human DCD and DBD pancreas | Low pressure with UW MPS for 6 h, active oxygenation | Cellular ATP, histology, ROS generation, islet isolation and culture | Oxygenated HMP regenerated cellular ATP levels, minimal histological evidence of ROS generation or apoptosis, 90% islet viability after isolation and culture |
| Branchereau [ | France | Human DBD pancreas | Low pressure with UW MPS for 24 h | Macroscopic appearance, perfusion dynamics, histology | Extended duration HMP with improving resistance index during HMP, minimal macroscopic oedema, minimal cellular oedema or necrosis (vs SCS control), positive immunohistostaining for insulin and glucagon in islets in HMP preserved pancreata. |
| Normothermic machine perfusion studies | |||||
| Barlow [ | UK | Human DCD and DBD pancreas | 55 mmHg perfusion, ABO-compatible blood perfusate for 2 h | Macroscopic appearance, perfusion dynamics, insulin levels, acid-base balance, histology | Feasible application of strategies used in kidney NMP to the pancreas with stable perfusion dynamics, maintenance of pH homeostasis, but heterogeneous insulin secretion and focal and patchy acinar and fat necrosis, demonstrating need for further development. |
| Nassar [ | USA | Human DBD pancreas | 60 mmHg perfusion with ABO-compatible blood perfusate for 6-12 h | C-peptide level, histology, immunohistostaining for islets | In this limited study, after an extended duration of NMP, histological assessment demonstrated limited necrosis, and perfusate C-peptide levels increased during perfusion suggesting viability. |
| Kuan [ | Australia | Porcine DCD pancreas (+ kidney) | Dual perfusion of kidney/pancreas vs pancreas alone, with autologous whole blood for 2 h at 70 mmHg | Perfusion dynamics, acid-base balance, macroscopic appearance, histology | A short duration of NMP using an autologous whole blood demonstrated stable perfusion maintenance of acid-base homeostasis, but both macroscopic and microscopic evaluations demonstrated severe oedema, haemorrhagic congestion, acinar necrosis, and vessel thrombosis by 90 min. |
| Kumar [ | UK | Porcine DCD pancreas | Perfusion with autologous whole blood for 4 h comparing low (20 mmHg) or high (50 mmHg) pressure | Perfusion dynamics, acid-base balance, insulin secretion, exocrine function, macroscopic appearance, histology | Both pressures produced stable flow and equal oxygen consumption, but there was a global deterioration in acid-base haemostasis. Exocrine functionally was similar, but greater insulin release in the high-pressure group. Conversely, there was improved cell death profile, and greater ATPase activity with low-pressure perfusion. |
Fig. 2Photo of human pancreas graft undergoing hypothermic machine perfusion and subsequent normothermic reperfusion viability assessment. (Reprinted from Hamaoui et al., with permission from Elsevier) [48•]