| Literature DB >> 32983760 |
Allyson R Alfonso1, Elie P Ramly1, Rami S Kantar1, William J Rifkin1, J Rodrigo Diaz-Siso1, Bruce E Gelb2, Joseph S Yeh3, Mark F Espina3, Sudheer K Jain3, Greta L Piper4, Eduardo D Rodriguez1.
Abstract
Anesthetic considerations are integral to the success of facial transplantation (FT), yet limited evidence exists to guide quality improvement. This study presents an institutional anesthesia protocol, defines reported anesthetic considerations, and provides a comprehensive update to inform future directions of the field.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32983760 PMCID: PMC7489595 DOI: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000002955
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open ISSN: 2169-7574
Systematic Search Strategy
| Search Terms Used in Databases | ||
|---|---|---|
| PubMed/Medline | Embase (Ovid) | CINAHL (EBSCOhost) |
| “Facial transplantation” [MeSH:no exp] | “Facial transplantation”.mp. or *facial transplantation/ | “Facial transplantation” MH |
| “Face transplant*” [tw] | “Face transplant”.mp. | Face transplant TW |
| “Facial transplant*” [tw] | “Facial transplant”.mp. | Facial transplant TW |
| “Face transplantation” [tw] | “Face transplantation”.mp. | Face transplantation TW |
| “Facial transplantation” [tw] | “Face allotransplantation”.mp. | Facial transplantation TW |
| “Face allotransplantation” [tw] | “Facial allotransplantation”.mp. | Face allotransplantation TW |
| “Facial allotransplantation” [tw] | “Facial vascularized composite allotransplantation”.mp. | Facial allotransplantation TW |
| “Facial vascularized composite allotransplantation” [tw] | “Face vascularized composite allotransplantation”.mp. | Facial vascularized composite allotransplantation TW |
| “Face vascularized composite allotransplantation” [tw] | “Face vascularized composite allograft”.mp. | Face vascularized composite allotransplantation TW |
| “Face vascularized composite allograft” [tw] | “Facial vascularized composite allograft”.mp. | Face allograft TW |
| “Facial vascularized composite allograft” | “Face allograft”.mp. | Facial allograft TW |
| “Face allograft” [tw] | “Facial allograft”.mp. | Face composite tissue allotransplantation TW |
| “Facial allograft” [tw] | “Face composite tissue allotransplantation”.mp. | Facial composite tissue allotransplantation TW |
| “Face composite tissue allotransplantation” [tw] | “Face composite tissue allotransplantation”.mp. | Face composite tissue allograft TW |
| “Facial composite tissue allotransplantation” [tw] | “Facial composite tissue allograft”.mp. | Facial composite tissue allograft TW |
| “Face composite tissue allograft” [tw] | “Face composite tissue allograft”.mp. | Face vascularized composite allograft TW |
| “Facial composite tissue allograft” [tw] | Facial vascularized composite allograft TW | |
MH, MeSH Headings; TW, text words.
Fig. 1.General schematic of the (A) donor and (B) recipient operating rooms with placement of the anesthesia team. Printed with permission and copyrights retained by Eduardo D. Rodriguez, MD, DDS. IV indicates intravenous.
Donor Characteristics and Preoperative Status
| Donor A | Donor B | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (y) | 26 | 23 |
| Sex | Male | Male |
| Blood type | O+ | O+ |
| Serologies | CMV+ | EBV+ | CMV− | EBV− |
| BMI | 24.9 | 34.9 |
| Weight (kg) | 86 | 120 |
| Medical history | Traumatic brain injury s/p 2 craniotomies for hematoma evacuation; brain death; secondary hypothyroidism | Substance use; psychiatric illness; hepatitis/hepatosteatosis; brain death |
| ASA classification | 6 | 6 |
| Hematology | Hgb 6.8 | Hct 21.3 | Hgb 8.2 | Hct 24.4 |
| Coagulation | PT 16.0 | INR 1.4 | PT 14.1 | INR 1.2 |
| Metabolic | Na 148 | K 3.6 | Cl 112 | Ca 9.6 | Na 149 | K 3.7 | Cl 117 | Ca 7.7 |
| BUN 21 | Cr 0.5 | Gluc 177 | BUN 32 | Cr 1.1 | Gluc 117 | |
| Hepatic | ALT 94 | AST 24 | Alk Phos 131 | Alb 2.5 | ALT 134 | AST 169 | Alk Phos 154 | Alb 2.6 |
| pH/lactate (mmol/L) | 7.39/1.2 | 7.32/0.6 |
| MAP at procedure start | 100 mm Hg | 120 mm Hg |
| CVP at procedure start | 9 mm Hg | 18 mm Hg |
| Temperature (°C) | 36.3 | 36.9 |
Alb, albumin; Alk Phos, alkaline phosphatase; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; ASA, American Society of Anesthesiologists; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; BMI, body mass index; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; Ca, calcium; Cl, chloride; CMV, cytomegalovirus; Cr, creatinine; Gluc, glucose; CVP, central venous pressure; EBV, Epstein-Barr Virus; Hct, hematocrit; Hgb, hemoglobin; INR, international normalized ratio; K, potassium; Na, sodium; PT, prothrombin time; s/p, status post; Toxo, toxoplasma.
Fig. 2.Donor intraoperative monitoring of UOP and MAP. This figure was made using Prism 7.04 (GraphPad Software, La Jolla, Calif.).
Donor Procedure Summary of Procedure Times, Total Urine Output, and Fluid Replacement
| Donor A | Donor B | |
|---|---|---|
| Facial allograft procurement time (h) | 12 | 10 |
| Total procurement time (h) | 17.5 | 16 |
| Total urine output (L) | 4.5 | 2.0 |
| Crystalloid infusion (L) | 8.95 | 7.6 |
| Albumin (g) | 25 | — |
| pRBC | 9 | 7 |
| FFP | 2 | 3 |
| Platelets | — | 1 |
FFP, fresh frozen plasma.
Recipient Characteristics and Pre- and Postoperative Laboratory Values
| Recipient A | Recipient B | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (y) | 41 | 25 | ||
| Sex | Male | Male | ||
| Blood type | O+ | O+ | ||
| Serologies | CMV+ | EBV+ | CMV− | EBV− | ||
| BMI | 30.0 | 20.8 | ||
| Weight (kg) | 94.9 | 71.5 | ||
| Medical history | Thermal burn, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, chronic pain | Ballistic trauma, former smoker, depression, chronic pain | ||
| Extent of defect | Scalp, forehead, eyelids, nose, cheeks, lower face, ears, lips, neck | Midface, nose, maxilla, mandible, lips | ||
| Allograft type | Full | Partial | ||
| Allergies | None | Amoxicillin | ||
| ASA | 3 | 3 | ||
| Preoperative | Postoperative | Preoperative | Postoperative | |
| Hematology | Hgb 14.1 | Hct 41.3 | Hgb 7.0 | Hct 19.3 | Hgb 12.0 | Hct 35.3 | Hgb 8.8 | Hct 23.9 |
| Coagulation | PT 13.2 | INR 1.1 | PT 15.4 | INR 1.3 | PT 15.3 | INR 1.3 | PT 25.6 | INR 2.2 |
| Metabolic | Na 134 | K 4.0 | Cl 100 | Ca 9.2 | Na 136 | K 4..0 | Cl 101 | Ca 8.6 | Na 138 | K 4.3 | Cl 98 | Ca 9.4 | Na 130 | K 4.4 | Cl 97 | Ca 7.9 |
| BUN 13 | Cr 0.9 | Gluc 91 | BUN 11 | Cr 0.7 | Gluc 136 | BUN 25 | Cr 0.7 | Gluc 78 | BUN 13 | Cr 0.6 | Gluc 172 | |
| Hepatic | ALT 34 | AST 29 | ALT 27 | AST 20 | ALT 74 | AST 34 | ALT 32 | AST 38 |
| Alk Phos 65 | Alb 3.8 | Alk Phos 25 | Alb 2.4 | Alk Phos 75 | Alb 4.4 | Alk Phos <25 | Alb 2.4 | |
| pH/lactate | 7.36/1.3 | 7.41/1.4 | 7.41/0.8 | 7.40/1.6 |
| MAP (start/end) | 109 mm Hg | 85 mm Hg | 65 mm Hg | 61 mm Hg |
| CVP (start/end) | 6 mm Hg | 10 mm Hg | 19 mm Hg | 9 mm Hg |
| Temperature (°C) | 36.6 | 35.9 | 36.5 | 37.6 |
PPV instead of CVP documented.
Alb, albumin; Alk Phos, alkaline phosphatase; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; ASA, American Society of Anesthesiologists; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; BMI, body mass index; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; Ca, calcium; Cl, chloride; CMV, cytomegalovirus; Cr, creatinine; CVP, central venous pressure; EBV, Epstein-Barr virus; Gluc, glucose; Hct, hematocrit; Hgb, hemoglobin; INR, international normalized ratio; K, potassium; MAP, mean arterial pressure; Na, sodium; PPV, pulse pressure variation; PT, prothrombin time; Toxo, toxoplasma.
Fig. 3.Recipient intraoperative monitoring of UOP and MAP. This figure was made using Prism 7.04 (GraphPad Software, La Jolla, Calif.).
Recipient Procedure Summary of Duration of Surgery, Fluid Resuscitation, and Length of Stay
| Recipient A | Recipient B | |
|---|---|---|
| Duration of surgery (h) | 26 | 25 |
| Estimated blood loss (L) | 6 | 4 |
| Total urine output (L) | 3.9 | 4.6 |
| Crystalloid infusion (L) | 18 | 15.5 |
| Albumin (g) | 137.5 | 152.5 |
| pRBC | 13 | 17 |
| FFP | 11 | 6 |
| Platelets | 2 | 2 |
| ICU length of stay (d) | 51 | 23 |
| Total hospital length of stay (d) | 62 | 37 |
| Tracheostomy duration (d) | 241 | 150 |
FFP, fresh frozen plasma.
Fig. 4.PRISMA diagram for article selection. PRISMA indicates Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses; CINAHL, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature.
Summary of Available Data from Reported Cases in the Literature
| Literature Review | ||
|---|---|---|
| N | Median (Range) | |
| Recipient age (y) | 42 | 34 (19–64) |
| Sex | 43 | 35 males, 8 females |
| Allograft type | 43 | 26 partial, 17 full |
| Allograft procurement time (h) | 20 | 6 (4–13.3) |
| Operative time (h) | 33 | 18 (9–28) |
| Crystalloid infusion (L) | 15 | 13 (5–18) |
| pRBC | 26 | 13 (0–66) |
| FFP | 19 | 10 (0–63) |
| Platelets | 15 | 1 (0–9) |
| ICU length of stay (d) | 24 | 8 (1–65) |
FFP, fresh frozen plasma.
Summary of Available Data from Reported Cases in the Literature Stratified by Allograft Type and Surgical Indication
| Partial FT | Full FT | Ballistic Trauma | Burn | Neurofibromatosis | Animal Attack | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | Median (Range) | n | Median (Range) | n | Median (Range) | n | Median (Range) | n | Median (Range) | n | Median (Range) | |
| Allograft procurement time (h) | 12 | 8.1 (4.3–13.3) | 8 | 4.8 (4–12) | 9 | 9 (4.5–12) | 7 | 6 (4–12) | 2 | 4.9 (4.3–5.6) | 1 | 4 (–) |
| Operative time (h) | 20 | 18.5 (11–28) | 13 | 17 (9–26) | 15 | 18 (11–26) | 8 | 16.5 (9–28) | 4 | 20.3 (15–24) | 3 | 18 (15–19) |
| Crystalloid infusion (L) | 9 | 13 (5–17) | 6 | 12 (8–18) | 8 | 12 (5–16) | 4 | 13 (8–18) | 2 | 13 (–) | 0 | — |
| pRBC | 14 | 10 (0–66) | 12 | 13 (2–27) | 12 | 13 (0–20) | 7 | 5 (2–66) | 4 | 26 (22–28) | 2 | 13 (6–20) |
| FFP | 10 | 8 (2–63) | 9 | 11 (0–16) | 9 | 6 (2–16) | 5 | 11 (0–63) | 3 | 13 (2–23) | 1 | 16 (–) |
| Platelets | 9 | 2 (0–9) | 6 | 1 (0–7) | 6 | 2 (0–7) | 4 | 2 (0–9) | 3 | 1 (1–3) | 1 | 0 (–) |
| ICU length of stay (d) | 14 | 12 (1–65) | 10 | 6 (2–51) | 11 | 9 (2–23) | 7 | 4 (2–65) | 3 | 12 (7–47) | 1 | 18 (–) |
FFP, fresh frozen plasma.
Summary of Anesthetic Considerations in Facial Transplantation Based on Our Institutional Experience and Literature Review
| Preoperative Considerations | Supporting Literature |
|---|---|
| • Development of a “Face Transplant Anesthesia Protocol” | [1,5,17,18,20,44–49] |
| • Team cadaveric simulations and/or research procurement rehearsals | [1,2,4,5,16,31,32,38,45,48,50–54] |
| Recipient | |
| • Evaluation of anesthetic, surgical and medical histories, risk of bleeding, possibility of difficult airway | [1,17,18,32,34,40–42,55–60] |
| • Pain management evaluation, particularly assessment of chronic pain | [61,62] |
| • Establishment of central and peripheral vascular access and monitoring | [5,11,17,20] |
| • Additional procedure(s): tracheostomy, gastrostomy, CT head/neck, formal angiography, reconstructive procedures in preparation for transplantation | [1,11,16–18,25,26,32,34,37, |
| Donor | |
| • Management protocol for heart-beating brain-dead donors | [1,4,20,25,34,44–46,54,67,68] |
| • Monitoring during transfer from an outside hospital | [4,16,21,25] |
| • Establishment of central and peripheral vascular access and monitoring | [5,20,25,46] |
| • Additional procedure(s): tracheostomy, bronchoscopy, CT chest/abdomen/pelvis, echocardiography, solid organ biopsies, CT cerebral angiography, formal angiography, mask production | [1,2,4,16,17,24–26,34, |
| Intraoperative Considerations | |
| • Coordination between recipient and donor rooms | [1,16,32,37,39,40,43,45,51,53] |
| Recipient | |
| • Prevention of pressure injury by offloading and appropriate padding | [5] |
| • Regular suction with placement of throat packs to avoid airway occlusion | |
| • Maintenance of body temperature using lower and underbody forced-air warming blankets | [17,18] |
| • Anticipation of blood loss particularly during allograft reperfusion | [11,17,30,33,35,46,52,65,72,73] |
| • Controlled hypotension (case and surgeon-specific) | [17,20] |
| • Administration of induction immunosuppression and antimicrobial prophylaxis | [1,17,20,25,27,32,34–39,42,43,54,74–80] |
| Donor | |
| • Planning for prolonged allograft procurement time | [1,16,25,33,34,44,45,54,65,67,75] |
| • Positioning within communication distance of all procurement teams | [5,44–46] |
| • Management protocol for “face-first” procurement from heart-beating brain-dead donors | [1,5,44,45,50,52,67] |
| • Maintenance of body temperature using lower and underbody forced-air warming blankets | |
| • Anticipation of blood loss particularly during skeletal osteotomies and after initiation of abdominal organ recovery | [4,25,45,53] |
| Acute Postoperative Considerations | |
| • Administration of immunosuppression, antimicrobial, and antithrombotic prophylaxis | [1,5,17,25,27,31,32,34–40,42,43, |
| • Elevation of head of bed >30° with frequent allograft monitoring for viability or rejection | [5,19,20,32] |
| • Multimodal pain management with close monitoring of end tidal CO2 levels | [19,32,62] |
| • Implementation of a rehabilitation protocol | [5,31,39,40,47,66,85–87] |
| Long-term postoperative considerations | |
| • Outpatient pain management strategy and follow-up | [88–90] |
| • Planning for revision procedures as needed | [77,91,92] |
Supporting literature highlights select representative references from the facial transplantation literature review that are elaborated on in the narrative synthesis.
CO2, carbon dioxide; CT, computed tomography.
Donor Physiologic Responses after Neurologic Determination of Death, Management Goals, and Recommended Intervention by Organ System[93–97]
| System | Physiologic Responses | Management Goals | Recommended Intervention |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiovascular | • Initial hypertensive crisis followed by hypotension | • MAP ≥60 mm Hg | • Nitroprusside or esmolol for initial hypertension |
| • CVP 4–10 mm Hg | • Vasoactive agents to maintain hemodynamic goal and organ perfusion: dopamine, vasopressin (refractory shock), norepinephrine, phenylephrine, dobutamine, epinephrine (severe shock) | ||
| • Arrhythmia secondary to metabolic derangements | • HR 60–120 beats/min | ||
| • Left ventricular ejection fracture ≥45% | |||
| • ≤1 vasopressor and low dose (eg, dopamine ≤10 µg/kg/min) | |||
| Respiratory | • Pulmonary edema | • Pa | • Use lung-protective ventilation (eg, small TV 6–8 mL/kg, low F |
| • pH value from arterial blood gas 7.3–7.45 | |||
| • Begin with lung recruitment maneuvers | |||
| • Elevate head of bed to reduce risk of aspiration | |||
| • Consider diuretics if marked fluid overload | |||
| Renal | • Vascular constriction resulting in AKI | • Urine output over 4 h | • Goal is euvolemia using CVP, PAOP, or PPV and SVV with preferably crystalloid |
| ≥ 1 mL/kg/h | |||
| Endocrine | • Hyperglycemia | • Glucose level <150 mg/dL | • Insulin infusion to goal glucose |
| • Vasopressin deficiency | • Consider vasopressin replacement | ||
| • Corticosteroid deficiency | • High-dose corticosteroids bolus then continuous infusion | ||
| • Hypothyroidism | |||
| • Consider thyroid replacement therapy with T3 and T4 bolus then continuous infusion | |||
| Hematologic | • Coagulopathy | • Hemoglobin level >7 g/dL | • Monitor with coagulation laboratory values and TEG |
| • Transfuse for hemoglobin <7 g/dL | |||
| • Correct coagulopathy with clotting factors (ie, FFP) or platelets if ongoing bleeding | |||
| Neurologic | • Hypothermia | • Temperature >35°C | • Active warming to maintain temperature |
| • Central diabetes insipidus and hypernatremia | • Serum sodium level | • Cautious correction of hypernatremia can be possible with slow, hypotonic infusion of 0.45% NaCl | |
| <155 mmol/L | |||
| • Movements mediated by spinal reflexes | • Intraoperative skeletal muscle paralysis to reduce somatic response to surgical stimulus |
Hyperglycemia should be controlled based on institutional intensive care unit guidelines.
High-dose corticosteroids should only be administered after blood has been collected for tissue typing.
AKI, acute kidney injury; CVP, central venous pressure; FFP, fresh frozen plasma; Fio2, fraction of inspired oxygen; HR, heart rate; NaCl, sodium chloride; Pao2, partial pressure of arterial oxygen; PAOP, pulmonary artery occlusion pressure; PEEP, positive end-expiratory pressure; PPV, pulse pressure variation; SVV, stroke volume variation; T3, triiodothyronine; T4, thyroxine; TEG, thromboelastogram; TV, tidal volume.