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Curr Opin Organ Transplant · Apr 2013
ReviewThe use of extracorporeal membranous oxygenation in donors after cardiac death.
- Benoit Barrou, Claire Billault, and Armelle Nicolas-Robin.
- Department of Urology, Nephrology and Transplantation, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris, France. benoit.barrou@psl.aphp.fr
- Curr Opin Organ Transplant. 2013 Apr 1; 18 (2): 148-53.
Purpose Of ReviewThe purpose of the present review is to describe the methods using an extracorporeal membranous oxygenation (ECMO) circuit in donors after cardiac death and to evaluate their impact on the outcome of renal transplantation.Recent FindingsECMO can be used either in hypothermic conditions for total body cooling or in normothermic conditions and limited to the abdomen in a first phase, before subsequent in-situ cooling. In both cases, oxygen is added to the perfusion, as compared with the usual and simple cold in-situ perfusion. There is a strong experimental rationale to use ECMO in normothermic conditions. The clinical studies in renal transplantation are still few, retrospective with small cohorts (level 3 or 4, according to the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine). However, they all reach consistent conclusions with better kidney transplant outcome, both in uncontrolled (type I and II) and controlled (type III) donors, according to the Maastricht classification.SummaryThe use of ECMO in donors after cardio-circulatory death should be encouraged and further developed. Experimental work is in progress to better define the optimal conditions of the technique, which will help to limit or even repair the injuries, induced by warm ischaemia.
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