Transplantation of discarded livers following viability testing with normothermic machine perfusion

Hynek Mergental(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Richard W. Laing(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Amanda Kirkham(Cancer Research UK Clinical Trials Unit), M. Thamara P. R. Perera(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Yuri L. Boteon(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Joseph Attard(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Darren Barton(Cancer Research UK Clinical Trials Unit), Stuart M. Curbishley(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Manpreet Wilkhu(Cancer Research UK Clinical Trials Unit), Desley Neil(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Stefan G. Hübscher(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Paolo Muiesan(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), John Isaac(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Keith Roberts(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Manuel Abradelo(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Andrea Schlegel(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), James Ferguson(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Hentie Cilliers(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Julian Bion(University of Birmingham), David Adams(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), C.G. Morris(OrganOx (United Kingdom)), Peter J. Friend(University of Oxford), Christina Yap(Institute of Cancer Research), Simon C. Afford(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Darius F. Mirza(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust)
Nature Communications
June 16, 2020
Cited by 464Open Access
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Abstract

There is a limited access to liver transplantation, however, many organs are discarded based on subjective assessment only. Here we report the VITTAL clinical trial (ClinicalTrials.gov number NCT02740608) outcomes, using normothermic machine perfusion (NMP) to objectively assess livers discarded by all UK centres meeting specific high-risk criteria. Thirty-one livers were enroled and assessed by viability criteria based on the lactate clearance to levels ≤2.5 mmol/L within 4 h. The viability was achieved by 22 (71%) organs, that were transplanted after a median preservation time of 18 h, with 100% 90-day survival. During the median follow up of 542 days, 4 (18%) patients developed biliary strictures requiring re-transplantation. This trial demonstrates that viability testing with NMP is feasible and in this study enabled successful transplantation of 71% of discarded livers, with 100% 90-day patient and graft survival; it does not seem to prevent non-anastomotic biliary strictures in livers donated after circulatory death with prolonged warm ischaemia.


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