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Postgrad Med J 2001;77:681-685 doi:10.1136/pmj.77.913.681
  • Review

Use of non-heart-beating donors in renal transplantation

  1. R M Kimber,
  2. M S Metcalfe,
  3. S A White,
  4. M L Nicholson
  1. Department of Surgery, University of Leicester, Leicester General Hospital, Gwendolen Road, Leicester LE5 4PW, UK
  1. Miss Kimberrkimber{at}doctors.org.uk
  • Received 15 December 2000
  • Accepted 2 April 2001

Abstract

The rate of renal transplantation has plateaued and is now limited by the number of donor organs available. In the past all donor kidneys came from living donors or controlled non-heart beating donors. It was not until the introduction of brainstem death criteria that cadaveric heart beating donors became the main source. Recently, there has been renewed interest in non-heart beating donors, who have already suffered cardiorespiratory arrest. Kidneys from these donors have a unique set of problems associated with increased duration of warm ischaemia. To minimise this, the kidneys are cooled in situ using an intra-aortic balloon catheter and are perfused with cold hyperosmolar citrate. Retrieval can then proceed in the normal fashion. Despite a higher level of delayed graft function, the results from non-heart beating renal transplantation are good, with long term function comparable to cadaveric organs. If used safely, they enable significant expansion of the donor pool. Techniques in the future, such as machine perfusion preservation, may further improve the results from non-heart beating programmes.

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