Abstract

In Japan, multiple organ retrieval from brain-dead heart-beating donors has been gradually increasing since the law was adopted in 1997 and amended in 2009. However, almost more than 90% of total deceased donor kidney transplantation (DDKT) in Japan are still obtained from non–heart-beating donors (NHBD). The majority of NHBD are Maastricht categories IV and III. In category IV, we usually place a double balloon arterial and a venous drainage catheter via the femoral vessels after the diagnosis of clinical brain death and acquisition of informed consent from the family. After controlled cardiac arrest, the double balloons are inflated and in situ cold perfusion started as soon as possible to minimize warm ischemic time (WIT), seeking to achieve a zero to within a few minutes WIT in most cases. In category III, it is impossible to place the device prior to cardiac arrest. In these cases, after declaration of cardiac death, cardiopulmonary compression is accompanied by systemic heparinization, immediate laparotomy, and insertion of a cold perfusion catheter at the aortic and caval bifurcations to minimize WIT. NHBD kidney retrieval is critical; extirpation must be performed as rapidly as possible. The results of NHBD kidney transplantation in Japan are excellent, according to the advancement and utilization of in situ cannulation, organ perfusion, and sophisticated retrieval techniques. The patient and graft survival rates of DDKT at 1, 3, and 5 years in most recent 2001 to 2007 era were 95.4%, 92.2%, 89.1% (n = 945) and 89.2%, 83.7%, 77.8% (n = 919), respectively.

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