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Single‐center experience of extended brain‐death donor heart preservation with the organ care system.

Authors :
Gregory, Vasiliki
Isath, Ameesh
Lanier, Gregg M.
Levine, Avi
Pan, Stephen
Aggarwal‐Gupta, Chhaya
Elgar, Guy
Shimamura, Junichi
Wolfe, Kevin
Gass, Alan
Spielvogel, David
Kai, Masashi
Ohira, Suguru
Source :
Artificial Organs. Sep2024, p1. 10p. 5 Illustrations.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background Methods Results Conclusion The Organ Care System (OCS) (Transmedics, Andover, MA) reduces cold ischemic time of donor hearts by producing a normothermic beating state during ex vivo perfusion, enabling extended ex situ intervals, which potentially increases donor pool. We aimed to compare outcomes in utilization of OCS and conventional cold storage technique.Consecutive heart transplants following brain death at our institution between May 2022 and July 2023 were analyzed. Recipients were divided into those receiving hearts preserved with OCS [N = 15] and those with conventional cold storage (Control, N = 27), with OCS utilization when anticipated ischemic time was more than 4 h. Pre‐transplant characteristics and transplant outcomes were compared.OCS utilization allowed a significant increase in distance traveled for heart retrieval (OCS, 624 ± 269 vs. Control, 153 ± 128 miles, p < 0.001), with longer mean total preservation times (6.2 ± 1.1 vs 2.6 ± 0.6 h, p < 0.001). All but one patient displayed a general decrease or plateau in lactate throughout perfusion time by OCS. Both groups experienced similar rates of severe primary graft dysfunction (OCS, 6.7% [N = 1] vs. Control, 11.1% [N = 3], p = 0.63), with 100% in‐hospital survival in the OCS group compared to 96.3% in the Control group (p = 0.34). Kaplan–Meier survival analysis showed that estimated one‐year survival were comparable (OCS, 93.3 ± 6.4% vs. Control, 88.9 ± 6.0%, p = 0.61).With a mean preservation time of around 6 h and distance covered of over 600 miles, our results using OCS indicate a potential to safely increase the quantity and viability of accessible organs, thus broadening the donor pool without negatively affecting outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0160564X
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Artificial Organs
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179451442
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/aor.14855