Outcomes following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: What is the potential for donation after circulatory death?

Author:

Tordoff Claire C12,Bodenham Andrew R2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anaesthesia, Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust, Leeds, UK

2. Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds, UK

Abstract

We conducted a prospective observational study on 100 consecutive patients admitted to intensive care units at Leeds General Infirmary following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. In the non-survivors, we reviewed their potential for organ donation via donation after circulatory death. Out of the 100 patients, 53 did not survive to hospital discharge. Out of these non-survivors, 13 died very suddenly within the intensive care unit and 3 other patients subsequently died in a general ward following discharge from the intensive care unit. One patient became brainstem dead, with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest secondary to a subarachnoid haemorrhage, rather than a primary cardiac cause. This patient went on to donate via the brain death mode. The remaining 36 patients had treatment withdrawn in the intensive care unit. Of these, 29 were referred to the transplant team for potential donation after circulatory death, and 14 were deemed to be medically suitable for organ donation. However, the families of only seven agreed to proceed with the donation process. Of these seven, only one went on to donate, primarily because the majority did not die within the 3-h window for acceptable warm ischaemia. In this series, the potential for donation after circulatory death following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest was limited. We would suggest an open dialogue between intensive care unit staff and transplant teams about the realistic potential for organ donation in each case. When clinicians believe it is unlikely that donation after circulatory death will proceed due to a failure to die within the pre-requisite time, then not starting with the donation after circulatory death process should be seriously considered.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Critical Care Nursing

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