ISOT关于脑死亡死亡供者器官移植可行性的立场声明:德尔菲共识

IF 6.2 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Manish R. Balwani , Vivek B. Kute , Jigar Shrimali , Bharat G. Jagiasi , Pradip Kumar Bhattacharya , Amit Pasari , Manoj Gumber , Sanjeev Gulati , Raj Kanwar Yadav , Shankar Prasad Nagaraju , Gomathy Narasimhan , Natarajan Gopalkrishnan , Divyesh Engineer , Tushar Dighe , Jamal Rizvi , Sanjay P. Kolte , Vishal Vasant Ramteke , Nishant Shantanu Deshpande , Priyanka Tolani , Georgi Abraham , Aneesh Srivastava
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管建立了死者供体器官移植(DDOT)计划,但器官短缺仍然是印度移植领域面临的一个重大挑战。由于在特定的临床情况下,由于供体的不确定性,许多来自脑死亡死亡供体(DBDs)的潜在存活器官被丢弃。为了解决这一差距,印度器官移植协会(ISOT)召集了一个由国家专家组成的小组,制定了一份德尔菲共识声明,旨在指导移植专业人员关于从dbd中捐赠器官的可行性,特别是在复杂或边缘供体情况下。本立场声明提出了19项基于现实世界临床情况的共识建议,如极端年龄、急性肾损伤、感染(包括HCV、HBV、HIV、结核病和热带疾病)、恶性肿瘤、糖尿病、高血压和各种手术异常。该指南以现有文献、登记数据和广泛的临床经验为基础,旨在扩大亚洲各地的DBD供体库,改善终末期器官衰竭患者的移植可及性。该共识不作为正式的临床指南,而是作为一种实用的参考工具,承认印度特定数据的局限性以及与西方移植环境的差异。它鼓励重症监护和移植团队对器官生存能力进行结构化评估,应用伦理原则,并根据当地法规寻求知情同意。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
ISOT position statement on the feasibility of an organ for transplantation from brain-dead deceased donors: a Delphi consensus
Organ shortage remains a critical challenge in India’s transplant landscape, despite established deceased donor organ transplantation (DDOT) programmes. Many potentially viable organs from brain-dead deceased donors (DBDs) are discarded due to uncertainties surrounding donor suitability in specific clinical scenarios. To address this gap, the Indian Society of Organ Transplantation (ISOT) convened a panel of national experts to develop a Delphi consensus statement aimed at guiding transplant professionals on the feasibility of organ donation from DBDs, particularly in complex or marginal donor situations. This position statement presents 19 consensus recommendations based on real-world clinical contexts such as extremes of age, acute kidney injury, infections (including HCV, HBV, HIV, tuberculosis, and tropical diseases), malignancy, diabetes, hypertension, and various surgical anomalies. The guidance is grounded in available literature, registry data, and extensive clinical experience, with the aim of expanding the DBD donor pool across Asia and improving access to transplantation for patients with end-stage organ failure. The consensus does not function as a formal clinical guideline but rather as a practical reference tool, acknowledging the limitations in India-specific data and the contextual differences from Western transplant settings. It encourages critical care and transplant teams to perform structured assessments of organ viability, apply ethical principles, and pursue informed consent in line with local regulations.
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