1. The Rapidly Evolving Landscape of DCD Heart Transplantation.
- Author
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Joshi Y, Wang K, MacLean C, Villanueva J, Gao L, Watson A, Iyer A, Connellan M, Granger E, Jansz P, and Macdonald P
- Subjects
- Humans, Graft Survival, Brain Death, Perfusion methods, Cold Ischemia, Heart Transplantation, Tissue Donors supply & distribution, Organ Preservation methods, Tissue and Organ Procurement methods
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: To summarise current international clinical outcomes from donation after circulatory death heart transplantation (DCD-HT); discuss procurement strategies, their impact on outcomes and overall organ procurement; and identify novel approaches and future areas for research in DCD-HT., Recent Findings: Globally, DCD-HT survival outcomes (regardless of procurement strategy) are comparable to heart transplantation from brain dead donors (BDD). Experience with normothermic machine perfusion sees improvement in rates of primary graft dysfunction. Techniques have evolved to reduce cold ischaemic exposure to directly procured DCD hearts, though controlled periods of cold ischaemia can likely be tolerated. There is interest in hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) for directly procured DCD hearts, with promising early results. Survival outcomes are firmly established to be equivalent between BDD and DCD-HT. Procurement strategy (direct procurement vs. regional perfusion) remains a source of debate. Methods to improve allograft warm ischaemic tolerance are of interest and will be key to the uptake of HMP for directly procured DCD hearts., Competing Interests: Declarations. Competing Interests: PM reports grants from National Health and Medical Research Foundation, grants from Medical Research Future Fund, grants and personal fees from Novartis, personal fees from Boehringer Ingleheim, personal fees from Astra-Zeneca, non-financial support from Indian Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation, non-financial support from Congress of the Asian Society of Transplantation, other from Infensa, other from Transmedics, outside the submitted work. Human and Animal Rights and Informed Consent: No animal or human subjects by the authors were used in this study., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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