| Literature DB >> 31963739 |
Viola Huang1,2, Negin Karimian1,2, Danielle Detelich1,2, Siavash Raigani1,2, Sharon Geerts2, Irene Beijert3, Fermin M Fontan1,2, Mohamed M Aburawi1,2, Sinan Ozer2, Peony Banik2, Florence Lin2, Murat Karabacak2, Ehab O A Hafiz4, Robert J Porte3, Korkut Uygun1,2, James F Markmann1, Heidi Yeh1,2.
Abstract
Ex situ machine perfusion is a promising technology to help improve organ viability prior to transplantation. However, preclinical studies using discarded human livers to evaluate therapeutic interventions and optimize perfusion conditions are limited by significant graft heterogeneity. In order to improve the efficacy and reproducibility of future studies, a split-liver perfusion model was developed to allow simultaneous perfusion of left and right lobes, allowing one lobe to serve as a control for the other. Eleven discarded livers were surgically split, and both lobes perfused simultaneously on separate perfusion devices for 3 h at subnormothermic temperatures. Lobar perfusion parameters were also compared with whole livers undergoing perfusion. Similar to whole-liver perfusions, each lobe in the split-liver model exhibited a progressive decrease in arterial resistance and lactate levels throughout perfusion, which were not significantly different between right and left lobes. Split liver lobes also demonstrated comparable energy charge ratios. Ex situ split-liver perfusion is a novel experimental model that allows each graft to act as its own control. This model is particularly well suited for preclinical studies by avoiding the need for large numbers of enrolled livers necessary due to the heterogenous nature of discarded human liver research.Entities:
Keywords: energy charge; ex situ perfusion; liver perfusion; liver transplant; machine perfusion; normothermic; split liver; subnormothermic
Year: 2020 PMID: 31963739 PMCID: PMC7019984 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9010269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Demographic data of discarded livers undergoing SNMP.
| Split-Liver Grafts ( | Whole-Liver Grafts ( | |
|---|---|---|
|
| 51 (36–59) | 49 (41–50) |
|
| 8 (73%) | 4 (100%) |
|
| 28.9 (25–32.4) | 28.2 (26.5–30.7) |
|
| 9 (82%) | 4 (100%) |
|
|
DCD + Age >55 years + macrosteatosis > 30% DCD + macrosteatosis >30% (×2) DCD + Age >55 years (×4) Atherosclerosis Lack of serology information Poor back table flush Unknown |
Warm ischemia > 30 min DCD + Age > 55 years |
|
| 31 (24–37) | 26 (24–30) |
|
| Right lobe: 697 (611–760) | 724 (694–788) |
|
| Right lobe: 1027 (893–1329) | 2139 (1892–2376) |
|
| 2.14 (1.55–2.37) | 2.06 (1.73–2.47) |
Continuous variables are presented as median with interquartile range (IQR). Categorical variables are presented as number and percentage. Abbreviations: DCD, Donated after circulatory death; SNMP, subnormothermic machine perfusion.
Figure 1Splitting of discarded donor liver. (A) The whole graft is thoroughly explored, and dissection is performed to the level of the bifurcation of the hepatic artery (HA), portal vein (PV), and bile duct (BD). (B) An anatomical split is performed, with assurance of adequate inflow and outflow. (C) The right lobar and (D) left lobar HA, PV, and BD are cannulated.
Figure 2Median vascular resistance of splits lobes during perfusion is statistically the same. (A) Hepatic arterial resistance was qualitatively higher in the right lobes compared with the left lobes, though did not reach statistical significance at any time point. Interestingly, whole-graft arterial resistance was approximately the average of the individual lobes. (B) Split right lobes tended to have higher portal venous resistance during perfusion compared with left lobes (not significant throughout), while whole grafts had lower overall portal venous resistance than individual split lobes.
Figure 3Hepatocyte injury and functional recovery are similar between split lobes during perfusion. (A) ALT (alanine aminotransferase) levels were comparable during perfusion between split right and left lobes (no significant difference). Whole grafts had lower ALT levels throughout perfusion compared with individual lobes, indicative of the cellular injury induces during surgical splitting. (B). Lactate levels tended to be higher in split left lobes but were not statistically significant from right lobes. Lactate levels decreased slowly during perfusion in both lobes. Whole grafts had lower lactate levels compared with individual lobes.
Figure 4Energy status is reflective of metabolism during subnormothermic perfusion despite splitting. During whole- and split-liver perfusions, (A) ATP:ADP, (B) ATP: AMP, and (C) energy charge ratios demonstrated comparable patterns over time, indicating mitochondrial function and restoration of ATP stores.
Figure 5Lobar cellular architecture indicates adequate parenchymal perfusion after splitting. Liver lobules were well preserved during perfusion, with mild sinusoidal congestion and cell swelling, but no increase in ischemic necrosis compared with the preperfusion. No differences were detected between right or left lobes of each individual liver. CV, central vein. * indicates areas of sinusoidal congestion.