A significant number of deceased donor kidneys donated for transplantation are not used and are thrown away due to lack of ways of checking their condition and function before the operation. This significantly reduces the number of potentially life saving transplants. The researchers wish to run a small pilot study to see if it is possible to improve the way transplant kidneys are assessed before transplantation by measuring how well they filter the blood, and how good their metabolism is. The researchers believe this new method will help transplant surgeons make better decisions about which kidneys to use. This pilot study will look at 10 kidneys obtained from older deceased donors. These kidneys are most at risk of being thrown away because of the condition of the donor they came from. At the hospital, these kidneys are usually put onto a machine which pumps cold preservation solution through them for a couple of hours. This time lets the transplant surgeons see how well or poorly the kidney responds to the flowing fluid. In this study the research team will do exactly the same, but also insert a small probe less than a millimetre in diameter into the kidney and the vein (draining blood pipe) and urine output to monitor a number of chemicals made by the kidney. The researchers believe that the changing levels of these chemicals will give the surgeons much more information than they have now. This probe is removed when the kidney is transplanted. Combining these levels with news of how well the patients recover after surgery will allow the research team to design a much larger study to get the right level of information to change the way surgeons choose kidneys and help more transplants happen in the future.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
10
Three microdialysis probes will be introduced into the kidney tissues, the vein and ureter in order to measure creatinine, glucose and lactate while the organ is undergoing cold perfusion prior to transplantation.
Hammersmith Hospital
London, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGPost-operative recovery of kidney function
Magnitude of change in patient baseline serum creatinine concentration pre- and post-operatively at 30 days (in umol/L)
Time frame: 30 days post-operatively
Reintervention rate
Any need to return the patient to theatre or perform additional procedures following the transplant
Time frame: 30 days post-operatively
Primary non-function
Number of participants with no change in serum creatinine concentration from baseline despite transplantation
Time frame: 30 days post-operatively
Delayed graft function
Number of days with inadequate graft function following surgery (low urine output, static serum creatinine concentration)
Time frame: 30 days post-operatively
Acute rejection
Number of patients experiencing immunological rejection of the organ
Time frame: 30 days post-operatively
Post-operative complications
Rates of the most common complications including arterial, venous, or parenchymal thrombosis, ureteric leak or stenosis
Time frame: 30 days post-operatively
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