活体肺叶移植。

Michael E Bowdish, Mark L Barr
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引用次数: 24

摘要

任何活体器官移植项目都必须保持对活体供体风险的持续认识,并应强烈鼓励进行全面的短期和长期随访,以保持这些可能挽救生命的项目的可行性。活体肺叶移植的肺叶切除术后没有围手术期或长期死亡率,在作者的系列研究中,供体肺叶切除术的围手术期风险与标准肺切除术相似。这些风险可能会增加,如果程序提供偶尔的基础上,而不是在一个完善的方案。需要进一步的长期结果数据,类似于活体肾和肝移植的数据。因此,作者仍然倾向于仅对临床病情恶化的患者进行活肺叶移植。他们认为,未来的捐赠者应该被告知与供体肺叶切除术相关的发病率和潜在的死亡率,以及移植后的预期寿命和生活质量方面的潜在受体结果。在过去的十年中,关于肺大叶移植的一个主要问题一直没有得到解答,即确定一个潜在的受体何时病得太严重,以至于不能证明将两个健康的供体置于供体肺叶切除术的风险中是合理的。受者年龄、性别、初次移植指征、住院前状态、术前类固醇使用、供者与受者的关系以及术后是否发生排斥反应似乎不影响总体死亡率。术前接受机械通气的患者和先前尸体或大叶肺移植后再次移植的患者术后死亡的优势比显著升高。因此,作者建议谨慎对待这些亚组患者。这种经验与尸体经验相似,插管患者的1年死亡率较高,接受再移植的患者的3年和5年生存率降低。华盛顿大学的研究小组也报告了类似的经验,但数量较少。尽管存在高风险患者,但这种替代程序挽救了重病患者的生命,这些患者可能会在尸体器官可用之前死亡或成为不合适的受体。尽管由于对供体的风险,尸体移植是可取的,但在适当选择的情况下,活体大叶肺移植应继续使用。虽然在供体队列中没有死亡,但在进一步的数据之前,应该引用0.5%至1%之间的死亡风险。考虑到机构、地区、国内和国际在接受活体供体器官用于移植的哲学和伦理上的差异,如果更多的肺移植中心考虑将这一程序作为一种选择,这些令人鼓舞的结果是重要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Living lobar lung transplantation.

A constant awareness of the risk to the living donors must be maintained with any live-donor organ transplantation program, and comprehensive short- and long-term follow-up should be strongly encouraged to maintain the viability of these potentially life-saving programs. There has been no perioperative or long-term mortality following lobectomy for living lobar lung transplantation, and in the authors' series the perioperative risks associated with donor lobectomy are similar to those seen with standard lung resection. These risks might increase if the procedure were offered on an occasional basis and not within a well-established program. Further long-term outcome data, similar to data for live-donor renal and liver transplantation, are needed. Therefore, the authors still favor performing living lobar lung transplantation only for the patient with a clinically deteriorating condition. They believe that prospective donors should be informed of the morbidity associated with donor lobectomy and the potential for mortality, as well of potential recipient outcomes in regard to life expectancy and quality of life after transplantation. A major question regarding lobar lung transplantation that has been unanswered during the last decade has been defining when a potential recipient is too ill to justify placing two healthy donors at risk of donor lobectomy. Recipient age, gender, indication for primary transplant, prehospitalization status, preoperative steroid usage, relationship of donor to recipient, and the presence or absence of rejection episodes postoperatively do not seem to influence overall mortality. Patients receiving mechanical ventilation preoperatively and those undergoing retransplantation after either a previous cadaveric or lobar lung transplantation have significantly elevated odds ratios for postoperative death. The authors therefore recommend caution in these subgroups of patients. This experience is similar to the cadaveric experience in which intubated patients have higher I-year mortalities and patients undergoing retransplantation have decreased 3- and 5-year survival. A similar experience with a smaller number of lobar transplants has been reported by the Washington University group. Despite the high-risk patient population, this alternative procedure has been life saving in severely ill patients who would die or become unsuitable recipients before a cadaveric organ becomes available. Although cadaveric transplantation is preferable because of the risk to the donors, living lobar lung transplantation should continue to be used under properly selected circumstances. Although there have been no deaths in the donor cohort, a risk of death between 0.5% and 1% should be quoted pending further data. These encouraging results are important if this procedure is to be considered as an option at more pulmonary transplant centers in view of the institutional, regional, and intra- and international differences in the philosophical and ethical acceptance of the use of organs from live donors for transplantation.

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