Department of Surgery, Division of Hepato-Biliary and Pancreatic Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Kobe University, Hyogo, Japan.
Department of Surgery, Japanese Red Cross Kumamoto Hospital, Kumamoto, Japan.
Transpl Infect Dis. 2022 Jun;24(3):e13845. doi: 10.1111/tid.13845. Epub 2022 May 9.
Although many transplant programs have been forced to suspend living donor transplants due to the emergence of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), there are relatively few real-time databases to assess center-level transplant activities. We aimed to delineate the actual impact of COVID-19 on living donor transplant programs and the resumption process in Japan.
In a nationwide survey, questionnaires were sent to 32 liver transplant programs that had performed at least more than one case of living donor liver transplantation in 2019 and 132 kidney transplant programs that had performed more than one living donor kidney transplantation in 2018.
Thirty-one (96.9%) and 125 (94.7%) liver and kidney transplant programs responded, respectively. In the early pandemic period, 67.7% (21/31) of liver programs and 29.8% (37/125) of kidney programs were able to maintain transplant activities similar to those during the pre-pandemic period. After temporal suspension, 58.1% of kidney programs resumed their transplant activity after the number of local COVID-19 cases peaked. Establishing institutional COVID-19 screening, triage, and therapeutic management protocols was mandatory to resume transplant activity for 64.5% and 67.7% of liver and kidney programs, respectively. In the future wave of COVID-19, 67.7% of liver programs would be affected by institutional COVID-19 intensive care unit-bound patient numbers, and 55.7% of kidney programs would stop if hospital-acquired severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection spreads.
THIS NATIONWIDE SURVEY REVEALED FOR THE FIRST TIME HOW LIVING DONOR LIVER AND KIDNEY: transplant programs changed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in a country where living donor transplantations are predominant.
尽管许多移植项目因冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的出现而被迫暂停活体供者移植,但很少有实时数据库来评估中心层面的移植活动。我们旨在描述 COVID-19 对活体供者移植项目的实际影响以及日本的恢复过程。
在一项全国性调查中,向 2019 年进行过至少一例活体供肝移植的 32 个肝移植项目和 2018 年进行过至少一例活体供肾移植的 132 个肾移植项目发送了问卷。
分别有 31(96.9%)和 125(94.7%)个肝和肾移植项目做出了回应。在大流行早期,67.7%(21/31)的肝项目和 29.8%(37/125)的肾项目能够维持与大流行前类似的移植活动。暂停后,在当地 COVID-19 病例数达到峰值后,58.1%的肾项目恢复了移植活动。建立机构 COVID-19 筛查、分诊和治疗管理方案对于分别恢复 64.5%和 67.7%的肝和肾项目的移植活动是强制性的。在未来的 COVID-19 浪潮中,67.7%的肝项目将受到机构 COVID-19 重症监护病房绑定患者数量的影响,如果医院获得性严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒 2(SARS-CoV-2)感染传播,55.7%的肾项目将停止。
本全国性调查首次揭示了活体供肝和肾移植项目如何在活体供者移植为主的国家应对 COVID-19 大流行而发生变化。