Optimisation of the organ donor and effects on transplanted organs: a narrative review on current practice and future directions

Mortality remains high for patients on the waiting list for organ transplantation. A marked imbalance between the number of available organs and recipients that need to be transplanted persists. Organs from deceased donors are often declined due to perceived and actual suboptimal quality. Adequate d...

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Main Authors: Bera, KD, Shah, A, English, MR, Harvey, D, Ploeg, RJ
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020
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author Bera, KD
Shah, A
English, MR
Harvey, D
Ploeg, RJ
author_facet Bera, KD
Shah, A
English, MR
Harvey, D
Ploeg, RJ
author_sort Bera, KD
collection OXFORD
description Mortality remains high for patients on the waiting list for organ transplantation. A marked imbalance between the number of available organs and recipients that need to be transplanted persists. Organs from deceased donors are often declined due to perceived and actual suboptimal quality. Adequate donor management offers an opportunity to reduce organ injury and maximise the number of organs than can be offered in order to respect the donor's altruistic gift. The cornerstones of management include: correction of hypovolaemia; maintenance of organ perfusion; prompt treatment of diabetes insipidus; corticosteroid therapy; and lung protective ventilation. The interventions used to deliver these goals are largely based on pathophysiological rationale or extrapolations from general critical care patients. There is currently insufficient high-quality evidence that has assessed whether any interventions in the donor after brain death may actually improve immediate post-transplant function and long-term graft survival or recipient survival after transplantation. Improvements in our understanding of the underlying mechanisms following brain death, in particular the role of immunological and metabolic changes in donors, offer promising future therapeutic opportunities to increase organ utilisation. Establishing a UK donor management research programme involves consideration of ethical, logistical and legal issues that will benefit transplanted patients while respecting the wishes of donors and their families.
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spelling oxford-uuid:b9db0f2c-9b0f-45a2-83a3-f6a131ab837a2022-03-27T05:05:57ZOptimisation of the organ donor and effects on transplanted organs: a narrative review on current practice and future directionsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:b9db0f2c-9b0f-45a2-83a3-f6a131ab837aEnglishSymplectic ElementsWiley2020Bera, KDShah, AEnglish, MRHarvey, DPloeg, RJMortality remains high for patients on the waiting list for organ transplantation. A marked imbalance between the number of available organs and recipients that need to be transplanted persists. Organs from deceased donors are often declined due to perceived and actual suboptimal quality. Adequate donor management offers an opportunity to reduce organ injury and maximise the number of organs than can be offered in order to respect the donor's altruistic gift. The cornerstones of management include: correction of hypovolaemia; maintenance of organ perfusion; prompt treatment of diabetes insipidus; corticosteroid therapy; and lung protective ventilation. The interventions used to deliver these goals are largely based on pathophysiological rationale or extrapolations from general critical care patients. There is currently insufficient high-quality evidence that has assessed whether any interventions in the donor after brain death may actually improve immediate post-transplant function and long-term graft survival or recipient survival after transplantation. Improvements in our understanding of the underlying mechanisms following brain death, in particular the role of immunological and metabolic changes in donors, offer promising future therapeutic opportunities to increase organ utilisation. Establishing a UK donor management research programme involves consideration of ethical, logistical and legal issues that will benefit transplanted patients while respecting the wishes of donors and their families.
spellingShingle Bera, KD
Shah, A
English, MR
Harvey, D
Ploeg, RJ
Optimisation of the organ donor and effects on transplanted organs: a narrative review on current practice and future directions
title Optimisation of the organ donor and effects on transplanted organs: a narrative review on current practice and future directions
title_full Optimisation of the organ donor and effects on transplanted organs: a narrative review on current practice and future directions
title_fullStr Optimisation of the organ donor and effects on transplanted organs: a narrative review on current practice and future directions
title_full_unstemmed Optimisation of the organ donor and effects on transplanted organs: a narrative review on current practice and future directions
title_short Optimisation of the organ donor and effects on transplanted organs: a narrative review on current practice and future directions
title_sort optimisation of the organ donor and effects on transplanted organs a narrative review on current practice and future directions
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