• J. Surg. Res. · Jul 2015

    Clinical Trial

    A rapid, reproducible, noninvasive predictor of liver graft survival.

    • Ali Zarrinpar, Coney Lee, Emily Noguchi, Hasan Yersiz, Vatche G Agopian, Fady M Kaldas, Douglas G Farmer, and Ronald W Busuttil.
    • Dumont-UCLA Transplant Center, Division of Liver and Pancreas Transplantation, Department of Surgery, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California. Electronic address: azarrinpar@mednet.ucla.edu.
    • J. Surg. Res. 2015 Jul 1; 197 (1): 183-90.

    BackgroundClinical and laboratory criteria are not reliable predictors of deceased donor liver graft quality. Intraoperative assessment of experienced surgeons is the gold standard. Standardizing and quantifying this assessment is especially needed now that regional sharing is the rule. We prospectively evaluated a novel, simple, rapid, noninvasive, quantitative measure of liver function performed before graft procurement.Materials And MethodsUsing a portable, finger-probe-based device, indocyanine green plasma disappearance rates (ICG-PDR) were measured in adult brain-dead donors in the local donor service area before organ procurement. Results were compared with graft function and outcomes. Both donor and recipient teams were blinded to ICG-PDR measurements.ResultsMeasurements were performed on 53 consecutive donors. Eleven liver grafts were declined by all centers because of quality; the other 42 grafts were transplanted. Logistic regression analysis showed ICG-PDR to be the only donor variable to be significantly associated with 7-d graft survival. Donor risk index, donor age, and transaminase levels at peak or procurement were not significantly associated with 7-d graft survival.ConclusionsWe report the successful use of a portable quantitative means of measuring liver function and its association with graft survival. These data warrant further exploration in a variety of settings to evaluate acceptable values for donated liver grafts.Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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