Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
UPDATE IN CARDIOTHORACIC TRANSPLANTATION Bartlomiej Zych, Diana Gracia-Saez, and Andre R Simon . Department of Cardiothoracic Transplantation & Mechanical Circulatory Support, Harefield Hospital, London, United Kingdom. Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Heart transplant activity UK • Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Lung and heart/lung transplant activity UK • Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust UK Donor Scout Pilot Project Early aggressive donor assessment and management including: Invasive hemodynamic monitoring. TOE. Bronchoscopy. Performed by dedicated cardiothoracic transplant teams. Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Principle of donor management “… in essence, donor management is a continuation of previous critical care management but with a shift in goals’’ McKeown DW. et al. BJA 2012 Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Impact of brain stem death on cardiovascular system and lungs. Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Impact of brain stem death on cardiovascular system and lungs. Arab D et al. Intensive Care Med 2003 Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Impact of brain stem death on carrdiovascular system and lungs. Phase I - Catecholamine Storm/hypertension: Increase in ICP , compensatory hypertension. Marked sympathetic stimulation, intense vasoconstriction, raised SVR. Consequences: Central redistribution of blood, increased afterload decreased coronary flow, subendocardial ischemia. 20 - 25% DBD donors with myocardial injury, approx. 40% with echocardiographic proven myocardial dysfunction. Pulmonary oedema: raised hydrostatic pulmonary pressure, endothelial damage – catecholamines. Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Impact of brain stem death on cardiovascular system and lungs. Phase II: Hypotension and hemodynamic instability. Neurogenic component Result of defective vasomotor control and subsequent, progressive loss of SVR. Hypovolaemic component Therapeutic dehydration for cerebral oedema. Haemorrhage. Diabetes insipidus with massive diuresis. Osmotic diuresis due to hyperglycaemia. Cardiogenic component Hypothermic depression of myocardial contractility. Left ventricular dysfunction (catecholamine storm). Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Impact of brain stem death on cardiovascular system and lungs. Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Impact of brain stem death on cardiovascular system and lungs. Incidence of pathophysiological changes following brain stem death: Physiologic changes During Brain Stem Death – Lessons for Management of the Organ Donor. The Journal of Heart & Lung Transplantation Sept 2004 (suppl) McKeown DW. et al. BJA 2012 Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Cardiovascular Management McKeown DW. et al. BJA 2012 Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Changes in UK transplant activity 2013-2014 Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Changes in UK transplant activity 2013-2014 Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Transmedics – Organ Care System for heart Preservation-transport of a continuously perfused, beating heart at 34°C. Avoids the negative effect of prolongedcold ischemic storage. Additional assessment options. Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Transmedics – Organ Care System for heart Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust 1. 2. At Donor site A. Donor management; Weaning inotropes, Hematocrit > 30% B. Donor blood collection (1500 ml) inmediately before aortic X Clamp C. Heart cannulation and instrumentation to OCS™ Heart management and assessment on OCS: A. Perfusion parameters (Aortic Pressure- AOP , Coronary flow-CF) B. Lactate: Venous < Arterial << 5 mmol/L and Lactate decreasing over time indicate good myocardial perfusion Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust ZONAL Northwich East Surrey Southampton x2 Oxford x3 St George’s x2 Charing Cross St Mary’s NON ZONAL Barnsley Milton Keynes Glasgow Kings London Bath Newcastle x2 Dublin North Wales Exeter Yeovil district Edinburgh x3 Ashford x2 Belfast Plymouth Aberdeen . Extending Safe Retrieval Range Using OCS . . Edinburgh Glasgow . Newcastle . Belfast Dublin . . Manchester . Nottingham . Oxford . .. Cardiff Bristol Bath Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust London OCS Case Series 22February 2013 – 29 April 2014 Donor Hearts Assessed on OCS 36 Turned Down After OCS Assessment = 6 Hearts Transplanted 30 Stable Perfusion & Lactate Profile Significant down-time Rising Lactate Unstable perfusion parameters 1 patient died after 44 days (Death not related with heart function) Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Donor-Recipient Profile Tx Date Donor profile Donor-Risk factors Recipient profile Recipient Risk Factors Feb 2013 44 ♂ Transport time165 min 39 ♂ High PVR (5.8 3.7) Feb 2013 50 ♂ Cardiac arrest 40 min Smoker, Diabetic 58 ♂ HVAD 5 previous sternotomies Mar 2013 47 ♂ Transport time 180 min NORAD 0.25; Vaso 6 29 ♂ - Apr 2013 46 ♀ Smoker; Obese; Alcohol abuse Palpable CAD; Cx 61 ♂ High PVR (2,7 2,5) MVR: Previous sternotomy Apr 2013 24 ♂ - 25 ♂ HVAD Apr 2013 20 ♂ Cardiac arrest 20 min; Tn T 160; Cocaine-Alcohol abuse, LVEF 50% 36 ♂ LVAD – Synergy Jun 2013 54 ♂ Smoker, Obese Coronary Disease Distal LAD 37 ♀ High PVR (2,8 1,8) Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Donor-Recipient Profile Tx Date Donor profile Donor-Risk factors Recipient profile Recipient Risk Factors June 2013 23 ♂ Left ventricle hypertrophy 24 ♂ HVAD June 2013 28 ♂ Transport time 270 min 44 ♀ High PVR (3.8 1.5) June 2013 33 ♂ Transport time 205 min 56 ♂ HMII pump infection, Liver- Renal failure, PVR (5.1 – 2.7) June 2013 53 ♂ ECG changes lateral wall 61 ♂ HMII, Pump infection July 2013 54 ♂ Transport time 210min 48 ♂ High PVR (5.2 1,7) Sept 2013 44 ♂ Logistics 22 ♂ - Sept 2013 49 ♂ Left ventricle hypertrophy. IVS 16 mm. Mild-mod MR 57 ♂ High PVR (5.3 1.95) Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Donor-Recipient Profile Tx Date Donor profile Donor-Risk factors Recipient profile Recipient Risk Factors Sept 2013 17 ♀ LVEF 40-44%. Transport time 240 min 26 ♀ High PVR (4.591.5) Sept 2013 34 ♂ Left ventricle hypertrophy IVS 14, PWD 15 - PWS18 33 ♂ HVAD Sept 2013 26 ♀ Transport time 210 min 48 ♂ High PVR (3.16 1.68) Sept 2013 52 ♂ Transport time 210 min 33 ♂ HMII Pump infection Nov 2013 40 ♂ Palpable CAD; LAD, RCA 48 ♂ HMII Pump infection Dec 2013 24 ♂ COD Trauma, ECG ischemia. Tn 2 (<0.05) 56 ♂ - Dec 2013 35 ♂ Transport time 180 min Cardiac arrest (30 min) Inferolat ischemia 58 ♂ HVAD, RVAD Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Donor-Recipient Profile Donor profile Donor-Risk factors Recipient profile Recipient Risk Factors Dec 2013 51 ♂ LVEF 45%. Palpable CAD; LMCA 34 ♂ - Jan 2014 48 ♀ Transport time 210 min Palpable CAD; LAD-diagonal 59 ♀ HVAD, 3 sternotomies, PVR 4.9 30 ♂ IABP Tx Date Transport time 210 min Mild RV dysfunction. Cocaine abuse Jan 2014 38 ♂ Jan 2014 42 ♂ Cardiac arrest 30 min, TnT, ECG, LVEF 48%, Moderate LVH (IVS 15, PWd 15) 57 ♂ High PVR 4 Jan 2014 21 ♀ Cardiac arrest 40 min 56 ♀ - Jan 2014 50 ♂ - 25 ♂ HVAD Pump infection Mar 2014 35 ♂ Cardiac arrest 40 min, Moderate LVH (IVS 16) 52 ♂ HVAD Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Donor-Recipient Profile Tx Date Donor profile Donor-Risk factors April 2014 April 2014 32 ♀ LVEF 50% Mild – Moderate MR. Sepsis Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Recipient profile Recipient Risk Factors 45 ♂ LVAD Levitronix 42 ♀ HVAD POSTOPERATIVE OUTCOME Mechanical circulatory support 4 (13%) RV Failure ( NO/Inotr > 1 week) 7 (23%) Duration Inotropic support (h) 116±90 Duration Nitric Oxide (h) 23 (16 ; 40) Blood loss in 24h 885 ± 556 Renal failure (CVVHDF) 14 (46%) ITU stay (days) 9.3 ± 10.4 days (2 – 44) Hospital stay (days) 33 ± 22 Survival 30 days 100% FOLLOW UP 255 ± 96 (142-395) Current Survival 95% LVEF 66 ± 5% (51 – 73%) Graft function preserved (LVEF>60) RV Function TAPSE Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust 27 ( 90%) 13.5 mm (12 ;16) Donation after circulatory death - DCD • • • Brain dead donors (DBD) are the main source of the organs for transplantation. Donation after circulatory dead (DCD) donors were introduced to lung transplantation by Love in 1995. Maastricht classification was introduced in 1995 and amended in 2000. • • • • • Category I – dead on arrival to hosital Category II – unsucceful resuscitation Category III – awaiting cardiac arrest Category IV – cardiac arrest after brain death diagnosis Category V – in-hospital cardiac arrest Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Background • Organ donor shortage is a main limitation of transplantation. Only 20 % of actual donors are donating lungs. 2009 OPTN/SRTR Annual Report. Transplant Activity in the UK.. Activity Report 2009/2010. • Lungs tolerate well warm ischemia up to 60-90 minutes in research settings. Egan TM et al. Ann Thorac Surg 1991;52:1113-1120 Van Redmonck DE et al. Ann Surg 1998;228:788-796 Loehe F et al. Ann Thorac Surg 2000;69:1556-1562 • Preliminary studies evaluating results of controlled DCD lung transplantation showed promising results comparable to standard procedures utilizing the organs from brain-dead donors. De Oliveira NC et al. J Thora Cardiovasc Surg 2010;139:1306-1315 De Vleeshauwer SI et al. J Heart Lung Transplant 2011;30:975-981 Van De Wauwer C et al. Eur J Cardiothoracic Surg 2011; 39:e175-180 Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Background • AGONAL TIME • WOT – CARDIAC ARREST • WARM ISCHEMIC TIME BEGINNING: • Sat O2<70% • SBP<50 mmHg • WARM ISCHEMIC TIME END • PA flush • Acceptable warm ischemic time up to 1 hour Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Management before Withdrawal of Life sustaining Treatment: • “Maintenance of life-sustaining treatment may be considered to be in the best interests of someone who wanted to be a donor if it facilitates donation and does not cause them harm or distress, or place them at significant risk of experiencing harm or distress.” • No treatment specifically aimed at organ donation should be instituted before the decision to withdraw treatment has been made. • Potential DCD donors should be cared for by staff with the appropriate competencies, particularly in end of life care. This may involve moving a patient from the ED to an ICU if possible, according to local policy. DCD CONSENSUS MEETING REPORT (June 2010) Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Process of Withdrawal of Life Sustaining Treatment • Withdrawal of cardio-respiratory support should always be conducted under the close supervision of senior medical staff (ITU) • Airway management (differs across UK) Actions after the withdrawal of Life Sustaining Treatment • Theatre teams are ready • Every 5 minutes coordinator to communicate vital signs • Abandon retrieval if patient remains stable for 120 min or functional warm ischemia ( RR below 50 mmHg, O2Sat below 70%) exceeds 60 min for lungs (different for each organ) Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Diagnosis of death: •“the individual should be observed by the person responsible for confirming death for a minimum of five minutes to establish that irreversible cardio respiratory arrest has occurred” (Academy of Medical Royal Colleges Code of Practice) •Confirm absence of circulation: arterial line/ echocardiography/ asystole on ECG •No intervention that can potentially restore cerebral circulation and function is allowed under any circumstances! Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Process of organ retrieval • Patient transferred to theatre ( 5 min after cardiac arrest) • Reintubation –anaesthetist ( 10 min after cardiac arrest) • Bronchoscopy ( rule out aspiration, secretion) by one Surgeon Simultaneously by 2 Surgeon: - opening of chest - cross clamp on aorta ( isolate cerebral circulation) - insertion of cannula into pulmonary artery - ventilate lungs – recruit atelectatic lung areas - start pulmoplegia - apply topical cooling with crushed ice • Organ harvest Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Lungs from donation after circulatory death donors: an alternative source to brain-dead donors? Midterm results at a single institution Bartlomiej Zych,*, Aron-Frederik Popov, Mohamed Amrani, Toufan Bahrami, Karen Christina Redmond, Heike Krueger, Martin Carby and André Ruediger Simon European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery 2012 Sep;42(3):542-9 Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Results Donor characteristics AGE GENDER: FEMALE MALE CAUSE OF DEATH: ICH HBI TBI CVA Meningitis other SMOKING HISTORY MECHANICAL VENTILATION (days) PaO2 (mmHg) TOTAL ISCHEMIC TIME (min.) AGONAL TIME (min.) WARM ISCHEMIC TIME ICH – intracranial hemorrhage DCD N - 26 45 (38.75;52) DBD N - 130 45 (34.5;53.5) p NS 17 (65%) 9 (35%) 82 (63%) 48 (37%) NS NS 16 (61.5%) 5 (19%) 2 (8%) 3 (11.5%) 0 0 15 (58%) 1 (1;3) 498.375 (451.5;525) 320 (298.75;393.25) 15 (12;24) 15 (12;19.25) 89 (68.6) 13 (10%) 14 (11%) 6 (4.5%) 6 (4.5%) 2 (1.5%) 67 (52%) 1 (1;3) 442.5 (371.25;502) 285.5 (240;373) NA NA NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS 0.009 0.025 HBI – hypoxic brain injury TBI - traumatic brain injury CVA – cerebrovascular accident Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Results Recipient’s characteristics and postoperative outcome AGE GENDER MALE: FEMALE: DIAGNOSIS CF: EMPHYSEMA: α1-ANTITRYPSIN DEFICIENCY: PF LAM SARCOIDOSIS PH OB ON-PUMP: OFF-PUMP DLTx: SLTx: POSTOPERATIVE ECMO: MECHANICAL VENTILATION (h) ICU LOS (d) HOSPITAL LOS (d) DCD N - 26 47 (30;53.7) DBD N - 129 47 (33;55) p NS 13 (50%) 13 (50%) 64 (49.6%) 65 (50.4%) NS NS 11 (42%) 10 (38%) 2 (8%) 1 (4%) 1 (4%) 1 (4%) 0 0 21 (80%) 5 (20%) 25 (96%) 1 (4%) 4 (16%) 47 (24;144) 5 (3;33) 35.5 (20.5;79.25) 43 (33.5%) 38 (29.5%) 21 (16%) 9 (7%) 5 (4%) 2 (1.5%) 7 (5.5%) 4 (3%) 97 (75%) 32 (25%) 109 (85%) 20 (15%) 6 (5%) 27 (12;204) 5 (3;21.5) 35 (25;54) NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS 0.066 NS NS NS Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Results Survival 100% DCD DBD 80% 60% 40% 20% p=ns 0% 0.00 500.00 1000.00 1500.00 2000.00 Time after transplant (days) Patient at risk DCD DBD 1 year 18(88.5%) 93(86.5%) 2 years 10(81.7%) 61(76.6%) Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust 3 years 4(81.7%) 32(74.8%) 4 years 1(81.7%) 5(70.9%) Results Lung function tests and freedom from BOS Freedom from BOS 100 % DCD DBD 80 % p=n s 60 % 40 % 20 % p=ns 0% 0.00 500.00 1000.00 1500.0 0 2000.0 0 Time after transplantation (days) Patient at risk DCD DBD 1 year 15(94.7%) 85(90.6%) 2 years 9(82.9%) 54(82.8%) 3 years 4(82.9%) 29(80.8%) P DCD DBD N 22 114 FEV1 – best (% predicted) 84 (72.5;95) 83 (63.65;98) NS Number of days achieved (d) 184.5 (130;298.75) 185 (107.5;298) NS N 21 114 FEV1 – 3 months (% predicted) 63 (60;75) 69 (52.3;86) N 21 110 FEV1 – 6 months (% predicted) 80 (52;88) 75 (56;90.35) N 14 80 FEV1 – 1 year (% predicted) 77.5 (66.25;96.25) 78 (56;94) N 8 45 FEV1 – 2 years (% predicted) 79 (66.5;96.25) 81 (48;95.75) N 4 26 FEV1 – 3 years (% predicted) 77.5 (63.5;91) 78 (52.5;92.5) 4 years 1(82.9%) 3(80.8%) Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust NS NS NS NS NS Results Primary Graft Dysfunction p=ns Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Results Rejection p=ns Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Conclusions • DCD lungs are a valuable source of good quality organs for transplantation providing a similar results compare to standard DBD lung transplantations. Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust Thank you very much for your kind attention Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust