Preservation of Organs to Be Transplanted: An Essential Step in the Transplant Process

Author:

Lepoittevin Maryne,Giraud Sébastien,Kerforne Thomas,Barrou Benoit,Badet Lionel,Bucur Petru,Salamé Ephrem,Goumard Claire,Savier EricORCID,Branchereau JulienORCID,Battistella Pascal,Mercier Olaf,Mussot Sacha,Hauet ThierryORCID,Thuillier RaphaelORCID

Abstract

Organ transplantation remains the treatment of last resort in case of failure of a vital organ (lung, liver, heart, intestine) or non-vital organ (essentially the kidney and pancreas) for which supplementary treatments exist. It remains the best alternative both in terms of quality-of-life and life expectancy for patients and of public health expenditure. Unfortunately, organ shortage remains a widespread issue, as on average only about 25% of patients waiting for an organ are transplanted each year. This situation has led to the consideration of recent donor populations (deceased by brain death with extended criteria or deceased after circulatory arrest). These organs are sensitive to the conditions of conservation during the ischemia phase, which have an impact on the graft’s short- and long-term fate. This evolution necessitates a more adapted management of organ donation and the optimization of preservation conditions. In this general review, the different aspects of preservation will be considered. Initially done by hypothermia with the help of specific solutions, preservation is evolving with oxygenated perfusion, in hypothermia or normothermia, aiming at maintaining tissue metabolism. Preservation time is also becoming a unique evaluation window to predict organ quality, allowing repair and/or optimization of recipient choice.

Funder

University of Poitiers

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Poitiers

Inserm

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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