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Maximizing use of organs recovered from the cadaver donor: cardiac recommendations1 1This article was originally published in Circulation. Copyright © 2002 American Heart Association, Inc. Reprinted with permission, Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins

Authors :
Wayne D. Babcock
G. William Dec
James B. Young
Robert S.D. Higgins
Myron Kauffman
Stuart D. Russell
James K. Kirklin
Robert C. Robbins
Jonathan G. Zaroff
Adrian B. Van Bakel
William F. Armstrong
Stephen R. Large
W. Steves Ring
Valluvan Jeevanandum
Niloo M. Edwards
Bruce R. Rosengard
David O. Taylor
Anthony M. D'Alessandro
Tammie S. Peterson
John Wallwork
Daniel Marelli
Source :
The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation. 21:1153-1160
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2002.

Abstract

The shortage of available donor hearts continues to limit cardiac transplantation. For this reason, strict criteria have limited the number of patients placed on the US waiting list to ≈6000 to 8000 per year. Because the number of available donor hearts has not increased beyond ≈2500 per year, the transplant waiting list mortality rate remains substantial. Suboptimal and variable utilization of donor hearts has compounded the problem in the United States. In 1999, the average donor yield from 55 US regions was 39%, ranging from 19% to 62%. This report provides the detailed cardiac recommendations from the conference on “Maximizing Use of Organs Recovered From the Cadaver Donor” held March 28 to 29, 2001, in Crystal City, Va. The specific objective of the report is to provide recommendations to improve the evaluation and successful utilization of potential cardiac donors. The report describes the accuracy of current techniques such as echocardiography in the assessment of donor heart function before recovery and the impact of these data on donor yield. The rationale for and specific details of a donor-management pathway that uses pulmonary artery catheterization and hormonal resuscitation are provided. Administrative recommendations such as enhanced communication strategies among transplant centers and organ-procurement organizations, financial incentives for organ recovery, and expansion of donor database fields for research are also described.

Details

ISSN :
10532498
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........306152a4530e7d266ac7c293e0dcafdb