1. Overcoming the Limits of Reconditioning: Seventeen Hours of EVLP With Successful Transplantation From Uncontrolled Circulatory Death Donor
- Author
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Giacomo Grasselli, Alberto Zanella, Giuseppe Citerio, Valeria Rossetti, Mario Nosotti, Lorenzo Rosso, Giorgio Alberto Croci, Giulia Maria Ruggeri, and Alessandro Palleschi
- Subjects
Male ,Extracorporeal Circulation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030230 surgery ,Cystic fibrosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation ,Humans ,Medicine ,Lung transplantation ,Respiratory function ,Warm Ischemia ,Lung ,Transplantation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Organ Preservation ,Original Clinical Science—General ,medicine.disease ,Circulatory death ,Tissue Donors ,Perfusion ,Liver biopsy ,Anesthesia ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Airway ,Lung Transplantation - Abstract
Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text., Background. Uncontrolled donation after circulatory death (DCD) donors are an extraordinary resource to increase the number of lungs available for transplantation. However, the risk of the warm ischemia resulting from cardiac arrest to irreversibly damage the organs is considerable. Moreover, graft preservation issues and organizational problems often worsen the dangerous effects of warm ischemia. Ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP) enables us to evaluate and recondition lungs whose functionality is doubtful, as well as to overcome the difficulties related to time and logistics. Methods. We report the case of uncontrolled DCD lungs successfully treated with an exceptionally prolonged EVLP. Because the donor’s blood count and liver biopsy showed signs of possible leukemia, EVLP was protracted up to 17 h while waiting for immunohistochemical analyses to rule out this diagnosis; eventually, the results came back negative, and the lungs were judged suitable for transplantation. Results. The recipient was a 32-y-old male individual with cystic fibrosis, colonized by Pandoraea pnomenusa. Bilateral transplantation required central extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. The patient was extubated after 36 h and was discharged 21 d after the operation. Despite early recolonization by Pandoraea pnomenusa and airway complications requiring pneumatic dilatation, he is alive and has a satisfactory respiratory function 15 mo after transplantation. Conclusions. Uncontrolled DCD represents a challenge due to both logistical issues and the complexity of graft evaluation before procurement. EVLP with cellular perfusate could be a valuable tool to overcome these limits. Nonetheless, caution should be exercised when interpreting the effects of this technique on airway healing.
- Published
- 2021
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