Machine
preservation may promote more organ sharing
Newswise — Preserving the kidneys of deceased
older donors on a pump – as opposed to the
conventional method of storing and transporting
organs in a cooler – may lower hospital costs,
improve initial organ function, and promote
greater use and more sharing of organs,
according to new research by Wake Forest
University Baptist Medical Center.
“By placing kidneys on a portable pump,
preservation times can be safely extended to
permit more time for sharing organs across
the country,” said Robert Stratta, M.D.,
lead researcher of the study, which is
reported in the May issue of the Journal of
the American College of Surgeons.
In addition, Stratta said, the pump can be used
to project the kidney’s initial function –
allowing for more appropriate matching of donor
organs and recipients.
While machine preservation, or pulsatile
perfusion, is not new, it is not widely used
because it is more costly and labor-intensive.
According to the United Network for Organ
Sharing, only 21 percent of kidneys from
deceased donors are preserved on a pump.
The purpose of this study was to compare
outcomes in kidney transplant patients receiving
kidneys from older deceased donors based on
whether organs were preserved by pump or cold
storage.
“The critical organ shortage poses a challenge
to optimize the use and function of all organs
from deceased donors,” said Stratta, explaining
why it is important to compare the two methods
of preservation.
With machine preservation, donated organs are
connected to a portable pump to maintain a
constant flow of a specialized preservation
solution through the organs until
transplantation. With both methods of
preservation, a cooling solution is pumped into
the organs during organ recovery. However, with
simple cold storage, the kidneys are simply
immersed in preservation solution and packed on
ice until transplant.
The study involved organs from “expanded
criteria” donors (ECDs). This category was
created by UNOS in 2002 so that higher risk
donor organs, once considered unsuitable, could
be transplanted safely. The category includes
kidneys from deceased donors over age 60 years
or those over age 50 with health conditions such
as high blood pressure, stroke or elevated
levels of a protein called creatinine. Levels of
creatinine, which is produced by muscle, are
used to determine kidney function.
The current study included 120 ECD kidney
transplants -- 95 kidneys were preserved with
machine and 25 with simple cold storage
preservation techniques.
Despite the fact that the machine-preserved
kidneys were out of the body for a longer period
of time (a mean of 24 hours versus 19 hours for
the cold stored organs), both groups of
recipients had similar survival and functional
outcomes. In addition, the patients receiving
machine-preserved kidneys had a 50 percent
reduction in the rates of viral infections and
delayed graft function, which is the inability
of the kidneys to start working on their own
without dialysis.
“The routine use of machine preservation for ECD
kidneys may lower hospital costs by reducing
complications,” said Stratta. “In addition, it
may promote more sharing of organs; it is a
superior means of preserving organs out of body
and provides a way to assess the viability of
the organ.”
Stratta said machine preservation has played an
important role in the Medical Center’s success
transplanting kidneys at the outer limits of the
ECD acceptance criteria, such as organs donated
after cardiac death, preserved for more than 30
hours, or from donors over age 70. In previous
studies with up to four years of follow-up data,
Stratta has shown that success rates with these
organs are equivalent to those of conventional
donors, in part because of appropriate donor and
recipient matching through using the pump to
assess viability and function.
Other researchers were Philip S. Moore, M.D.,
Alan C. Farney, M.D., PhD., Jeffrey Rogers,
M.D., Erica L. Hartmann, M.D., William Doares,
PharmD, Elizabeth E. Ashcraft, PharmD, Michael
D. Gautreux, Ph.D., Samy S. Iskandar, MBBCh,
PhD, and Patricia L. Adams, M.D., all with Wake
Forest.
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center is
an academic health system comprised of North
Carolina Baptist Hospital and Wake Forest
University Health Sciences, which operates the
university’s School of Medicine. The system
comprises 1,238 acute care, psychiatric,
rehabilitation and long-term care beds and is
consistently ranked as one of “America’s Best
Hospitals” by U.S. News & World Report.