Abstract

Owing to the extremely short supply of donor lungs in Japan, a unique medical consultant (MC) system was initiated in 2002 to increase the organ availability through intensive management of donors. First, heart transplant surgeons were sent to procurement hospitals as MCs to assess donor organ function and provide intensive care to donors. MCs requested that donor attending doctors perform frequent phlegm aspiration with a bronchoscope, leading to a higher lung availability and better outcomes after lung transplantation. Since 2011, 25 lung transplant surgeons have been registered as lung MCs to assess and manage donor lungs and communicate donor lung conditions to the lung transplantation teams. In 2014, the efficacy of this MC system on lung transplantation opportunities and outcomes was retrospectively reviewed. One hundred and eighty-seven brain-dead lung donor candidates were chronologically divided into three phases: I (May 1998 to November 2006, n=44) and II (December 2006 to January 2011, n=64), before and after MCs requested that local attending doctors perform aggressive bronchial suctioning using a bronchoscope, respectively; and III (February 2011 to January 2013, n=79), after the emergence of lung MCs. The lung utilization rates in phases I, II, and III were 61.4%, 71.9%, and 74.7% (per donor); 51.1%, 64.8%, and 67.7% (per lung, P=0.03). Graft death rates due to primary graft dysfunction in phases I, II, and III were 13.3%, 3.6%, and 3.7%, respectively (per lung, P=0.04). Recently, we analyzed the utilization rate of 63 brain-dead lung donor candidates for a period of one year, from June 2020 to May 2021, which was 83% (per donor). The lung MC system is effective in maintaining an extremely high lung utilization rate and favorable outcomes after lung transplantation in Japan.

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