Normothermic machine perfusion (NMP) preservation is a promising method to decrease the complication of marginal donor livers compared to cold storage (CS). The aim of this project is to assess safety and feasibility of NMP in human liver transplantation. This will be a single center prospective cohort pilot study. Thirty-two livers with acceptable quality for transplantation will be preserved with NMP in 2-18 hours and transplanted. The follow-up period will be 6 months post-transplantation. The outcome will be compared to 100 historical patients transplanted in our program in the past 5 years (liver preserved using CS) with matched characteristics on age, Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score, preservation time, etc.
The shortage of donor organs leads to the use of marginal donors including donors after cardiac death. Normothermic machine perfusion (NMP) preservation is a promising method to decrease their high risk of complication compared to the standard cold storage (CS). The aim of this project is to assess safety and feasibility of NMP in human liver transplantation. This will be a single center prospective cohort pilot study. Thirty-two livers that have acceptable quality for transplantation will be preserved with NMP in 2-18 hours after cross clamp and cold flush. The liver grafts at NMP will be at physiological temperature and have oxygen and nutrient supply with continuous perfusion. The transplantation and post-transplant care will follow the standard of care. The follow-up period is 12 months after transplantation. The primary end point will be the rate of post-transplant Early Allograft Dysfunction (EAD), while the secondary end points will be: primary non function (PNF) rate, 1 and 6 months patient and graft survival, peak liver function tests in the first 7 days after transplantation, intraoperative hepatic arterial and portal flow measurement, rate and magnitude of post-reperfusion syndrome, surgical outcomes (operative time, transfusion requirement etc.), rate of post-transplant kidney failure, assessment of histological ischemia reperfusion (liver and bile duct), rate of vascular complications, rate of biliary complications, hospital and ICU length of stay, rejection rate, infection rate, the ability to predict function based on "on-pump" viability markers, and the incidence of adverse effect (AE). The outcome will be compared to a control group of 100 historical patients (matched with a 1:4 ratio) transplanted in our program in the past 10 years (liver preserved using CS). Control subjects will be matched using donor and recipient age, Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score, cold ischemia time, donor risk index and presence of steatosis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
25
The liver grafts will be preserved at physiological temperature and have continuous perfusion with oxygen and nutrient supply in the ex vivo organ preservation phase.
Cleveland Clinic
Cleveland, Ohio, United States
the rate of Early Allograft Dysfunction post-transplantation in Normothermically Machine Perfused (NMP) livers
The presence of at least one of the following at post-transplant 7 days: serum bilirubin \>= 10 mg/dL, international normalized ratio (INF) \>= 1.6; and/or aspartate aminotransferase (AST) \> 2000 U/L at any time in the first 7 post-transplant days (POD)
Time frame: 7 days post-transplantation
primary non-function rate
Time frame: in the first 10 days post-transplantation
graft survival
The allograft will be considered lost if a patient has a liver re-transplant or in the event of patient death.
Time frame: 6 months post-transplantation
peak liver function tests in the first 7 days post-transplantation
Time frame: in the first 7 days post-transplantation
intraoperative flow measurement
Flows will be measured with a transit time flowmeter (VeriQ system, MediStim A/S, Oslo, Norway) after graft reperfusion. The following parameters will be recorded as per our standard practice during liver transplantation: portal venous flow, hepatic artery flow, and hepatic artery flow after temporary portal vein occlusion.
Time frame: intraoperative
post reperfusion syndrome (composite)
rate and magnitude
Time frame: in the first 7 days post-transplantation
surgical outcomes (composite)
operative time, transfusion requirement
Time frame: intraoperative
rate of post-transplant kidney failure
Time frame: in the 1, 3, 6 ,9 months post-transplantation
histology of liver parenchyma
Time frame: On the day of transplantation
vascular complications rate
Time frame: in the first day post-transplantation
biliary complications rate
Time frame: 6 months post-transplantation
hospital and ICU length of stay (composite)
Time frame: 6 months post-transplantation
rejection rate
Time frame: 6 months post-transplantation
opportunistic viral infection rate
Time frame: 6 months post-transplantation
patient survival
Time frame: 6 months post-transplantation
histology of bile duct
Time frame: On the day of transplantation
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