| Literature DB >> 32476043 |
Zhaosheng Jin1, Zac Hana1, Azeem Alam1, Shamala Rajalingam1, Mayavan Abayalingam1, Zhiping Wang2, Daqing Ma3.
Abstract
For various end-stage lung diseases, lung transplantation remains one of the only viable treatment options. While the demand for lung transplantation has steadily risen over the last few decades, the availability of donor grafts is limited, which have resulted in progressively longer waiting lists. In the early years of lung transplantation, only the 'ideal' donor grafts are considered for transplantation. Due to the donor shortages, there is ongoing discussion about the safe use of 'suboptimal' grafts to expand the donor pool. In this review, we will discuss the considerations around donor selection, donor-recipient matching, graft preparation and graft optimisation.Entities:
Keywords: Donor selection; Graft rejection; Lung transplantation; Postoperative complications
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32476043 PMCID: PMC7261511 DOI: 10.1007/s00540-020-02800-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anesth ISSN: 0913-8668 Impact factor: 2.078
Fig. 1Process of graft and recipient selection, DBD donation after brainstem death, DCD donation after circulatory death, EVLP Ex Vivo Lung Perfusion
Maastricht classification of donation after circulatory death
| Category I: | Patients pronounced dead prior to arrival at the hospital, cardiopulmonary resuscitation abandoned |
| Category II: | Patients with ongoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation on arrival, but unsuccessful |
| Category III: | Patients with planned withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies (controlled) |
| Category IV | Cardiac arrest after brain stem death |
Summary of the characteristics of donation after brainstem death and donation after circulatory death
| Donation after brainstem death | Donation after circulatory death | |
|---|---|---|
| Donation cohort | Patients that fulfil the criteria for brainstem death but maintain cardiac output | Donors who have died or are awaiting cardiac death |
| Proportion of donors | ≈ 65% | ≈ 35% |
| Warm ischaemic time | Minimal, due to maintenance of cardiac output | Usually prolonged, due to the interval after asystole where organs are not perfused and have not yet been cooled |
| Pathophysiological insult | Brainstem death results in systemic cytokine and cathecholamine release associated with haemodynamic instability and graft insult | Prolonged warm ischaemia stimulates the activation of innate and adaptive immune responses, generation of reactive oxygen species and induction of apoptosis |
| Graft outcomes | Current data suggest that careful selection of DCD candidates confers a long-term graft outcome that is comparable to DBD donors [ | |