Fisher Andrew, Andreasson Anders, Chrysos Alexandros, Lally Joanne, Mamasoula Chrysovalanto, Exley Catherine, Wilkinson Jennifer, Qian Jessica, Watson Gillian, Lewington Oli, Chadwick Thomas, McColl Elaine, Pearce Mark, Mann Kay, McMeekin Nicola, Vale Luke, Tsui Steven, Yonan Nizar, Simon Andre, Marczin Nandor, Mascaro Jorge, Dark John
Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Institute of Cellular Medicine, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2016 Nov;20(85):1-276. doi: 10.3310/hta20850.
Many patients awaiting lung transplantation die before a donor organ becomes available. Ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP) allows initially unusable donor lungs to be assessed and reconditioned for clinical use.
The objective of the Donor Ex Vivo Lung Perfusion in UK lung transplantation study was to evaluate the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of EVLP in increasing UK lung transplant activity.
A multicentre, unblinded, non-randomised, non-inferiority observational study to compare transplant outcomes between EVLP-assessed and standard donor lungs.
Multicentre study involving all five UK officially designated NHS adult lung transplant centres.
Patients aged ≥ 18 years with advanced lung disease accepted onto the lung transplant waiting list.
The study intervention was EVLP assessment of donor lungs before determining suitability for transplantation.
The primary outcome measure was survival during the first 12 months following lung transplantation. Secondary outcome measures were patient-centred outcomes that are influenced by the effectiveness of lung transplantation and that contribute to the health-care costs.
Lungs from 53 donors unsuitable for standard transplant were assessed with EVLP, of which 18 (34%) were subsequently transplanted. A total of 184 participants received standard donor lungs. Owing to the early closure of the study, a non-inferiority analysis was not conducted. The Kaplan-Meier estimate of survival at 12 months was 0.67 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.40 to 0.83] for the EVLP arm and 0.80 (95% CI 0.74 to 0.85) for the standard arm. The hazard ratio for overall 12-month survival in the EVLP arm relative to the standard arm was 1.96 (95% CI 0.83 to 4.67). Patients in the EVLP arm required ventilation for a longer period and stayed longer in an intensive therapy unit (ITU) than patients in the standard arm, but duration of overall hospital stay was similar in both groups. There was a higher rate of very early grade 3 primary graft dysfunction (PGD) in the EVLP arm, but rates of PGD did not differ between groups after 72 hours. The requirement for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support was higher in the EVLP arm (7/18, 38.8%) than in the standard arm (6/184, 3.2%). There were no major differences in rates of chest radiograph abnormalities, infection, lung function or rejection by 12 months. The cost of EVLP transplants is approximately £35,000 higher than the cost of standard transplants, as a result of the cost of the EVLP procedure, and the increased ECMO use and ITU stay. Predictors of cost were quality of life on joining the waiting list, type of transplant and number of lungs transplanted. An exploratory model comparing a NHS lung transplant service that includes EVLP and standard lung transplants with one including only standard lung transplants resulted in an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of £73,000. Interviews showed that patients had a good understanding of the need for, and the processes of, EVLP. If EVLP can increase the number of usable donor lungs and reduce waiting, it is likely to be acceptable to those waiting for lung transplantation. Study limitations include small numbers in the EVLP arm, limiting analysis to descriptive statistics and the EVLP protocol change during the study.
Overall, one-third of donor lungs subjected to EVLP were deemed suitable for transplant. Estimated survival over 12 months was lower than in the standard group, but the data were also consistent with no difference in survival between groups. Patients receiving these additional transplants experience a higher rate of early graft injury and need for unplanned ECMO support, at increased cost. The small number of participants in the EVLP arm because of early study termination limits the robustness of these conclusions. The reason for the increased PGD rates, high ECMO requirement and possible differences in lung injury between EVLP protocols needs evaluation.
Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN44922411.
This project was funded by the NIHR Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in ; Vol. 20, No. 85. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
许多等待肺移植的患者在获得供体器官之前就去世了。体外肺灌注(EVLP)可对最初无法使用的供体肺进行评估并使其恢复条件以供临床使用。
英国肺移植供体体外肺灌注研究的目的是评估EVLP在增加英国肺移植活动方面的临床有效性和成本效益。
一项多中心、非盲、非随机、非劣效性观察性研究,以比较经EVLP评估的供体肺和标准供体肺的移植结果。
多中心研究,涉及英国所有五个官方指定的国民保健服务(NHS)成人肺移植中心。
年龄≥18岁、患有晚期肺病且已被列入肺移植等待名单的患者。
研究干预为在确定供体肺是否适合移植之前对其进行EVLP评估。
主要结局指标是肺移植后前12个月的生存率。次要结局指标是以患者为中心的结局指标,这些指标受肺移植有效性的影响,并对医疗保健成本有贡献。
对53例不适合标准移植的供体肺进行了EVLP评估,其中18例(34%)随后进行了移植。共有184名参与者接受了标准供体肺。由于研究提前结束,未进行非劣效性分析。EVLP组12个月时的Kaplan-Meier生存估计值为0.67[95%置信区间(CI)0.40至0.83],标准组为0.80(95%CI 0.74至0.85)。EVLP组相对于标准组12个月总体生存的风险比为1.96(95%CI 0.83至4.67)。与标准组患者相比,EVLP组患者需要通气的时间更长,在重症监护病房(ITU)停留的时间更长,但两组的总体住院时间相似。EVLP组极早期(3级)原发性移植物功能障碍(PGD)的发生率较高,但72小时后两组的PGD发生率无差异。EVLP组体外膜肺氧合(ECMO)支持的需求率(7/18,38.8%)高于标准组(6/184,3.2%)。12个月时,胸部X线异常、感染、肺功能或排斥反应的发生率无重大差异。由于EVLP程序的成本以及ECMO使用增加和在ITU停留时间延长,EVLP移植的成本比标准移植高约35,000英镑。成本的预测因素是加入等待名单时的生活质量、移植类型和移植的肺数量。一个探索性模型比较了一个包括EVLP和标准肺移植的NHS肺移植服务与一个仅包括标准肺移植的服务,得出增量成本效益比为73,000英镑。访谈表明患者对EVLP的必要性和过程有很好的理解。如果EVLP能够增加可用供体肺的数量并减少等待时间,那么对于等待肺移植的人来说可能是可以接受的。研究局限性包括EVLP组数量较少,限制了分析为描述性统计,以及研究期间EVLP方案发生了变化。
总体而言,接受EVLP的供体肺中有三分之一被认为适合移植。估计12个月以上的生存率低于标准组,但数据也与两组生存率无差异一致。接受这些额外移植的患者早期移植物损伤率较高,需要进行计划外的ECMO支持,成本增加。由于研究提前终止,EVLP组参与者数量较少,限制了这些结论的稳健性。PGD发生率增加、ECMO需求高以及不同EVLP方案之间肺损伤可能存在差异的原因需要评估。
当前受控试验ISRCTN449224I1。
该项目由英国国家卫生研究院(NIHR)卫生技术评估计划资助,将全文发表于《;第20卷,第85期》。有关进一步的项目信息,请访问NIHR期刊图书馆网站。