Murugan Raghavan, Venkataraman Ramesh, Wahed Abdus S, Elder Michele, Hergenroeder Georgene, Carter Melinda, Madden Nicholas J, Powner David, Kellum John A
CRISMA Laboratory, Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Crit Care Med. 2008 Jun;36(6):1810-6. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e318174d89f.
Brain death induces a massive inflammatory response. However, the influence of this inflammatory response on organ procurement, transplantation, and recipient outcome is unknown. We describe the inflammatory response characteristics in brain-dead organ donors and examine associations with organ transplantation and recipient survival. We test the hypothesis that increased inflammatory response is associated with fewer organs transplanted and decreased recipient survival.
Prospective, observational, cohort study.
Two large intensive care units of tertiary care university hospitals in the United States.
We recruited 30 consecutive brain-dead organ donors and 78 recipients between April 11, 2004, and November 23, 2004; recipients were followed through May 2005. Following declaration of brain death, we collected data on donor demographics, mechanism of brain death, number of organs procured and transplanted, and recipient characteristics. Plasma cytokines (tumor necrosis factor, interleukin-6, interleukin-10) were measured in donors at baseline following study enrollment, every hour for the first 4 hrs, and immediately before organ procurement for transplantation.
None.
We examined the relationships among clinical characteristics, demographics, and cytokine response in donors and their influence on organ procurement and transplantation using multivariable regression and recipient's 6-month hospital-free survival using a Cox proportional hazards regression. One hundred-eighteen organs were procured from 30 donors, and 91 (77%) were transplanted (mean of three organs transplanted per donor). All cytokines were increased following brain death. Older age in donors was significantly associated with lower number of organs transplanted (p < .001). Higher plasma interleukin-6 concentrations in donors before organ procurement was significantly associated with lower 6-month hospital-free survival in recipients (hazard ratio 1.77; 95% confidence interval, 1.17-2.69, p < .007).
Among brain-dead organ donors, older age donors contribute fewer organs for transplantation, and increased donor interleukin-6 level before organ procurement is associated with lower recipient six-month hospital-free survival.
脑死亡会引发大规模炎症反应。然而,这种炎症反应对器官获取、移植及受体预后的影响尚不清楚。我们描述脑死亡器官捐献者的炎症反应特征,并研究其与器官移植及受体生存情况的关联。我们检验了以下假设:炎症反应增强与移植器官数量减少及受体生存率降低相关。
前瞻性观察性队列研究。
美国三级医疗大学医院的两个大型重症监护病房。
2004年4月11日至2004年11月23日期间,我们招募了30名连续的脑死亡器官捐献者和78名受体;对受体随访至2005年5月。在宣布脑死亡后,我们收集了捐献者的人口统计学数据、脑死亡机制、获取及移植的器官数量以及受体特征。在研究入组后基线时、最初4小时内每小时以及即将进行移植器官获取前,检测捐献者血浆中的细胞因子(肿瘤坏死因子、白细胞介素-6、白细胞介素-10)。
无。
我们使用多变量回归分析了捐献者的临床特征、人口统计学数据与细胞因子反应之间的关系及其对器官获取和移植的影响,并使用Cox比例风险回归分析了受体6个月无住院生存情况。从30名捐献者身上获取了118个器官,其中91个(77%)进行了移植(平均每名捐献者移植3个器官)。脑死亡后所有细胞因子均升高。捐献者年龄较大与移植器官数量较少显著相关(p < .001)。器官获取前捐献者血浆白细胞介素-6浓度较高与受体6个月无住院生存率较低显著相关(风险比1.77;95%置信区间,1.17 - 2.69,p < .007)。
在脑死亡器官捐献者中,年龄较大的捐献者提供的移植器官较少,且器官获取前捐献者白细胞介素-6水平升高与受体6个月无住院生存率较低相关。