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Sense and Sensibilities of Organ Perfusion as a Kidney and Liver Viability Assessment Platform

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Predicting organ viability before transplantation remains one of the most challenging and ambitious objectives in transplant surgery. Waitlist mortality is high while transplantable organs are discarded. Currently, around 20% of deceased donor kidneys and livers are discarded because of “poor organ quality”, Decisions to discard are still mainly a subjective judgement since there are only limited reliable tools predictive of outcome available. Organ perfusion technology has been posed as a platform for pre-transplant organ viability assessment. Markers of graft injury and function as well as perfusion parameters have been investigated as possible viability markers during ex-situ hypothermic and normothermic perfusion. We provide an overview of the available evidence for the use of kidney and liver perfusion as a tool to predict posttransplant outcomes. Although evidence shows post-transplant outcomes can be predicted by both injury markers and perfusion parameters during hypothermic kidney perfusion, the predictive accuracy is too low to warrant clinical decision making based upon these parameters alone. In liver, further evidence on the usefulness of hypothermic perfusion as a predictive tool is needed. Normothermic perfusion, during which the organ remains fully metabolically active, seems a more promising platform for true viability assessment. Although we do not yet fully understand “on-pump” organ behaviour at normothermia, initial data in kidney and liver are promising. Besides the need for well-designed (registry) studies to advance the field, the catch-22 of selection bias in clinical studies needs addressing.
Title: Sense and Sensibilities of Organ Perfusion as a Kidney and Liver Viability Assessment Platform
Description:
Predicting organ viability before transplantation remains one of the most challenging and ambitious objectives in transplant surgery.
Waitlist mortality is high while transplantable organs are discarded.
Currently, around 20% of deceased donor kidneys and livers are discarded because of “poor organ quality”, Decisions to discard are still mainly a subjective judgement since there are only limited reliable tools predictive of outcome available.
Organ perfusion technology has been posed as a platform for pre-transplant organ viability assessment.
Markers of graft injury and function as well as perfusion parameters have been investigated as possible viability markers during ex-situ hypothermic and normothermic perfusion.
We provide an overview of the available evidence for the use of kidney and liver perfusion as a tool to predict posttransplant outcomes.
Although evidence shows post-transplant outcomes can be predicted by both injury markers and perfusion parameters during hypothermic kidney perfusion, the predictive accuracy is too low to warrant clinical decision making based upon these parameters alone.
In liver, further evidence on the usefulness of hypothermic perfusion as a predictive tool is needed.
Normothermic perfusion, during which the organ remains fully metabolically active, seems a more promising platform for true viability assessment.
Although we do not yet fully understand “on-pump” organ behaviour at normothermia, initial data in kidney and liver are promising.
Besides the need for well-designed (registry) studies to advance the field, the catch-22 of selection bias in clinical studies needs addressing.

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