Liver transplantation choice of donor: Difference between revisions
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Overview | |||
Liver transplantation choice of donor | == Overview == | ||
== Liver transplantation choice of donor == | |||
=== '''Donation after brain death''' === | |||
* in 2013, a law was passed that ended a ban on transplanting organs from donors with HIV into HIV-positive recipients because of better HIV therapy as well as high waiting list mortality rates for patients with HIV [1] | |||
* Laboratory testing generally includes: | |||
* ABO blood type | |||
* complete blood count (CBC) | |||
* chemistries | |||
* prothrombin time (PT) | |||
* activated partial thromboplastin time (PTT) | |||
* hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) | |||
* anti-hepatitis B core antigen (HBc) | |||
* anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) | |||
* anti-HIV | |||
* venereal disease research laboratory (VDRL) | |||
* rapid plasma reagin (RPR) | |||
* anti-cytomegalovirus (CMV) | |||
* nucleic acid testing (NAT) for HIV and HCV in all or selected high risk donors [3] | |||
==== '''ABO compatibility''' ==== | |||
* Livers are routinely matched by ABO blood type (ABO identical), although mismatched organs have been used in extreme circumstances. Mismatched organs may either be ABO compatible (eg, an organ from a donor who is type O going to a recipient who is type B) or ABO incompatible (eg, an organ from an donor who is type A going to a recipient who is type B). | |||
* two-year graft survival was 30 percent in 17 ABO-incompatible emergency transplants compared with 76 percent in 55 ABO-compatible emergency transplants and 80 percent in 162 ABO-compatible elective transplants [42] [43]. | |||
* good outcomes have been reported among recipients with blood type O who receive an organ from a donor with blood type A2 with overall and graft survival rates that are similar to those seen when a recipient with blood type O receives an ABO-compatible organ [44]. |
Revision as of 21:38, 14 December 2017
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Mohammed Abdelwahed M.D[2]
Overview
Liver transplantation choice of donor
Donation after brain death
- in 2013, a law was passed that ended a ban on transplanting organs from donors with HIV into HIV-positive recipients because of better HIV therapy as well as high waiting list mortality rates for patients with HIV [1]
- Laboratory testing generally includes:
- ABO blood type
- complete blood count (CBC)
- chemistries
- prothrombin time (PT)
- activated partial thromboplastin time (PTT)
- hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)
- anti-hepatitis B core antigen (HBc)
- anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV)
- anti-HIV
- venereal disease research laboratory (VDRL)
- rapid plasma reagin (RPR)
- anti-cytomegalovirus (CMV)
- nucleic acid testing (NAT) for HIV and HCV in all or selected high risk donors [3]
ABO compatibility
- Livers are routinely matched by ABO blood type (ABO identical), although mismatched organs have been used in extreme circumstances. Mismatched organs may either be ABO compatible (eg, an organ from a donor who is type O going to a recipient who is type B) or ABO incompatible (eg, an organ from an donor who is type A going to a recipient who is type B).
- two-year graft survival was 30 percent in 17 ABO-incompatible emergency transplants compared with 76 percent in 55 ABO-compatible emergency transplants and 80 percent in 162 ABO-compatible elective transplants [42] [43].
- good outcomes have been reported among recipients with blood type O who receive an organ from a donor with blood type A2 with overall and graft survival rates that are similar to those seen when a recipient with blood type O receives an ABO-compatible organ [44].