Abstract

BackgroundIschemic injury during the agonal period of donation after circulatory death donors remains a significant barrier to increasing abdominal transplants. A major obstacle has been the inability to improve visceral perfusion, while at the same time respecting the ethics of the organ donor. A retrievable dual-chamber stentgraft could potentially isolate the organ perfusion from systemic hypotension and hypoxia, without increasing cardiac work or committing the donor. MethodsRetrievable dumbbell-shaped stents were laser welded from nitinol wire and covered with polytetrafluoroethylene. Yorkshire pigs were assigned to either agonal control or dumbbell-shaped dual-chamber stentgraft. A central lumen maintained aortic flow, while an outer visceral chamber was perfused with oxygenated blood. A 1-hour agonal phase of hypoxia and hypotension was simulated. Stents were removed by simple sheath advancement. Cardiac monitoring, labs, and visceral flow were recorded followed by recovery of the animal to a goal of 48 hours. ResultsCardiac stress did not increase during stent deployment. Visceral pO2 and flow were dramatically improved in stented animal relative to control animals. Five of 7 control animals were killed after renal failure complications, whereas all stent animals survived. Histology confirmed increased ischemic changes among control kidneys compared to stented animals. ConclusionA dual-chamber stent improved outcomes after a simulated agonal phase. The stent did not increase cardiac work, thus respecting a key ethical consideration. The ability of a dual-chamber stent to prevent ischemia during organ recovery may become a powerful tool to address the critical donor organ shortage.

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