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Management of the Potential Organ Donor in the ICU: Society of Critical Care Medicine/American College of Chest Physicians/Association of Organ Procurement Organizations Consensus Statement

Authors :
Robert M, Kotloff
Sandralee, Blosser
Gerard J, Fulda
Darren, Malinoski
Vivek N, Ahya
Luis, Angel
Matthew C, Byrnes
Michael A, DeVita
Thomas E, Grissom
Scott D, Halpern
Thomas A, Nakagawa
Peter G, Stock
Debra L, Sudan
Kenneth E, Wood
Sergio J, Anillo
Thomas P, Bleck
Elling E, Eidbo
Richard A, Fowler
Alexandra K, Glazier
Cynthia, Gries
Richard, Hasz
Dan, Herr
Akhtar, Khan
David, Landsberg
Daniel J, Lebovitz
Deborah Jo, Levine
Mudit, Mathur
Priyumvada, Naik
Claus U, Niemann
David R, Nunley
Kevin J, O'Connor
Shawn J, Pelletier
Omar, Rahman
Dinesh, Ranjan
Ali, Salim
Robert G, Sawyer
Teresa, Shafer
David, Sonneti
Peter, Spiro
Maryam, Valapour
Deepak, Vikraman-Sushama
Timothy P M, Whelan
Kevin, O'Connor
Source :
Critical care medicine. 43(6)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

This document was developed through the collaborative efforts of the Society of Critical Care Medicine, the American College of Chest Physicians, and the Association of Organ Procurement Organizations. Under the auspices of these societies, a multidisciplinary, multi-institutional task force was convened, incorporating expertise in critical care medicine, organ donor management, and transplantation. Members of the task force were divided into 13 subcommittees, each focused on one of the following general or organ-specific areas: death determination using neurologic criteria, donation after circulatory death determination, authorization process, general contraindications to donation, hemodynamic management, endocrine dysfunction and hormone replacement therapy, pediatric donor management, cardiac donation, lung donation, liver donation, kidney donation, small bowel donation, and pancreas donation. Subcommittees were charged with generating a series of management-related questions related to their topic. For each question, subcommittees provided a summary of relevant literature and specific recommendations. The specific recommendations were approved by all members of the task force and then assembled into a complete document. Because the available literature was overwhelmingly comprised of observational studies and case series, representing low-quality evidence, a decision was made that the document would assume the form of a consensus statement rather than a formally graded guideline. The goal of this document is to provide critical care practitioners with essential information and practical recommendations related to management of the potential organ donor, based on the available literature and expert consensus.

Details

ISSN :
15300293
Volume :
43
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Critical care medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7fc29ff2c81d2df62e184ad942a0636e