Deceased donation in renal transplantation

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TitreDeceased donation in renal transplantation
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuteursThuret R., Kleinclauss F., Terrier N., Timsit M.O
JournalPROGRES EN UROLOGIE
Volume26
Pagination909-939
Date PublishedNOV
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1166-7087
Mots-clésBrain death, Cardiac arrest, epidemiology, Organ donation, transplantation
Résumé

Objectives. To review epidemiologic data's and medical results of deceased donation in renal transplantation. Material and methods. Relevant publications were identified through Medline and Embase database using the following keywords, alone or in association, ``brain death; cardiac arrest; deceased donation; organ procurement; transplantation''. Articles were selected according to methods, language of publication and relevance. The reference lists were used to identify additional historical studies of interest. Both prospective and retrospective series, in French and English, as well as review articles and recommendations were selected. In addition, French national transplant and health agencies databases were screened using identical keywords. A total of 2498 articles, 8 official reports and 17 newspaper articles were identified; after careful selection 157 publications were eligible for our review. Results. Deceased donation may involve either brain death or non-heartbeating donors (NHBD). Organ shortage led to the procurement of organs from expanded-criteria donors, with an increased age at donation and extended vascular disease, leading to inferior results after transplantation and underlining the need for careful donor management during brain death or cardiac arrest. Evolution of French legislation covering bioethics allowed procurement from Maastricht categories II and recently III non-heartbeating donors. Conclusion. The increase of organ shortage emphasizes the need for a rigorous surgical technique during procurement to avoid loss of transplants. A history or current neoplasm in deceased-donors, requires attention to increase the pool of organs without putting the recipients at risk for cancer transmission. French NHBD program, especially from Maastricht category In, may stand for a potential source of valuable organs. (C) 2016 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

DOI10.1016/j.purol.2016.08.021