Background: Increasing numbers of patients with end-stage renal failure are receiving kidneys from nondirected kidney donors (NKDs), also known as altruistic donors. Transplant outcomes for recipients of such kidneys are largely inferred from studies on specified kidney donors (SKDs), which may be inaccurate due to differences in donor, recipient and transplant specific factors. We report the outcomes for recipients of NKD in the United Kingdom.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Supplemental oxygenation of the standard hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) circuit has the potential to invoke favorable changes in metabolism, optimizing cadaveric organs before transplantation.
Methods: Eight pairs of porcine kidneys underwent 18 hours of either oxygenated (HMP/O2) or aerated (HMP/Air) HMP in a paired donation after circulatory death model of transplantation. Circulating perfusion fluid was supplemented with the metabolic tracer universally labeled glucose.
The aim of this study was to determine the effect of donor body mass index (BMI) on deceased donor kidney transplant outcomes. Data were collected from the UK Transplant Registry for all deceased donor kidney transplant recipients between January 2003 and January 2015. Univariable and multivariable analyses were undertaken to assess the impact of donor BMI on a range of outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) and static cold storage (SCS) are the two methods used to preserve deceased donor kidneys prior to transplant. This study seeks to characterise the metabolic profile of HMP and SCS porcine kidneys in a cardiac death donor model. Twenty kidneys were cold flushed and stored for two hours following retrieval.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The aim of this study is to determine the feasibility of using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) tracer studies ((13)C-enriched glucose) to detect ex vivo de novo metabolism in the perfusion fluid and cortical tissue of porcine kidneys during hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP).
Methods: Porcine kidneys (n = 6) were subjected to 24 h of HMP using the Organ Recovery Systems LifePort Kidney perfusion device. Glucose, uniformly enriched with the stable isotope (13)C ([U-(13)C] glucose), was incorporated into KPS-1-like perfusion fluid at a concentration of 10 mM.
Background: Current transplant immunosuppression regimens have numerous limitations. Recent evidence suggests histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACis) may represent a class of drug with immunosuppressive properties. This study compares cyclosporin A (CyA) with the pan-HDACi suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA) and a novel HDAC6-specific inhibitor (KA1010) in models of alloreactivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Hypothermic machine perfusion offers great promise in kidney transplantation and experimental studies are needed to establish the optimal conditions for this to occur. Pig kidneys are considered to be a good model for this purpose and share many properties with human organs. However it is not established whether the metabolism of pig kidneys in such hypothermic hypoxic conditions is comparable to human organs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The metabolic processes occurring within the preserved kidney during hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) are not well characterized. The aim of this study was to use nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to examine the metabolomic profile of HMP perfusate from human cadaveric kidneys awaiting transplantation and to identify possible discriminators between the profiles of kidneys with delayed graft function (DGF) and immediate graft function (IGF).
Methods: Perfusates from HMP kidneys were sampled at 45 min and 4 hr of preservation with the LifePort Kidney Transporter 1.
Acute rejection is a significant problem for patients undergoing HLA-incompatible renal transplantation, affecting between 12 and 53% of patients. Any mechanism of detecting rejection in advance of current methods would offer significant benefit. This study aimed to evaluate whether serum biomarkers could predict rejection in HLAi transplants recipients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Clin Transplant
February 2012
Sickle cell disease is an inherited, structural hemoglobin defect with multisystemic sequelae including renal failure. Patients with sickle cell disease are thought to benefit from renal transplant, but the long-term outcomes in such patients are unclear and have not been supported by any large prospective studies. Similarly, the renal morbidity and outcome after transplant in patients with sickle cell trait is also unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Hand port devices (HPD) are used routinely for hand-assisted laparoscopic surgery including hand-assisted laparoscopic donor nephrectomy (HALDN). However, the cost of such devices may prove prohibitive, particularly in centers with financial constraints. The authors aimed to identify any adverse effects of performing device-free HALDN.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Clin Transplant
September 2010
Objectives: Hand-assisted laparoscopic donor nephrectomy has become an established technique for live-donor organ retrieval. In most cases, the left kidney is removed because of its more favorable anatomic relations, particularly with the major abdominal vessels.
Materials And Methods: We present 2 cases of live donation in which a hand-assisted laparoscopic approach was used to remove the right kidney as indicated by the presence of aberrant vascular anatomy, 1 being situs inversus totalis, the other a left-sided inferior vena cava.
Introduction: Calciphylaxis occurring after kidney transplantation is rare and rarely reported. It results in chronic non-healing wounds and is associated with a poor prognosis and is often fatal. We present a case of proximal lower limb calciphylaxis that occurred early after kidney transplantation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndexed mitochondrial complex activities (MCAi) were determined in biopsies obtained from 52 donor kidneys at the end of cold ischemia (8-32 hr) to see if longer anoxia affected MCAi and accounted for the increased risk of delayed graft function (DGF) in recipients of grafts with longer cold ischemia time (CIT) or from non-heart-beating donors (NHBD). CITs were significantly different between those with and without DGF (P=0.02), being shorter in the latter, but MCAi were similar.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: A reduction in acute rejection may reduce graft losses from chronic rejection, benefiting the recipient and helping ease the huge donor organ shortfall in the UK. The prediction of recipients at greater risk of acute rejection might justify the administration to them of more potent immunosuppression, but defining this group on clinical parameters has been largely unsuccessful. Events impacting on the kidney by the time of donation may, if detectable histologically, predict those kidneys more likely to undergo rejection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF