Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
36 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2025-02-17
2026-05-31
Brief Summary
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The discarded organs are mostly those coming from donors who have died due to cardiac arrest (called 'donation after circulatory death' or DCD), with only 27% of them being used in the UK. The quality of these DCD organs could be improved by changing how they are preserved after being removed from the donor. The most commonly used strategy is still to remove the livers and put them in an icebox ('static cold storage' or SCS). The alternative approaches, which are more complex and expensive, but that can also improve the quality of the DCD livers, involve using machines to pump fluids through the livers ('machine perfusion' or MP).
There are three MP methods being used in patients: 1) normothermic regional perfusion (NRP), which involves pumping the donor's blood through the liver after the donor has died but the liver is still in the donor's body; 2) normothermic machine perfusion (NMP), in which the liver is pumped with blood outside of the donor's body; and 3) hypothermic machine perfusion (HOPE), which is also used outside of the donor's body by pumping cold fluid into the liver. HOPE and NRP have been shown to improve how well DCD livers function after transplantation. NMP can also improve the quality of the DCD livers, but its main advantage is that it allows confirming that the donated liver functions well before proceeding with the transplant. Until now, there has not been a proper comparison of these methods, and the doctors do not understand well the mechanisms through which MP improves the quality of the DCD livers.
The iInvestigators plan to conduct a study where 36 DCD human livers will be split into three groups: SCS, NRP, and HOPE. After that, they will be put in NMP to confirm that they are good enough to be transplanted and to study the mechanisms through which NRP, SCS and HOPE work.
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Detailed Description
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Our proposal will include three key objectives:
1. To investigate the role of mitochondrial damage in the IRI that takes place when DCD livers are transplanted.
2. To determine the mechanisms through which the different MP strategies influence IRI in DCD liver transplantation.
3. To develop markers to assess the quality of the livers while they are being perfused using NMP before being transplanted into patients.
Our study will allow us to decipher the mechanisms of liver IRI in humans in a much better way than what has been achieved to date. Furthermore, it will provide guidelines as to the best way of employing the MP technologies and may result in the identification of new treatments. Ultimately, our proposal will serve to improve the quality of DCD livers and increase the number of patients who can safely receive a liver transplant.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
i) SCS; ii)NRP; and iii) HOPE. This will be followed by a period of time in NMP in order to study the IRI response and determine if the quality of the livers is good enough to proceed to transplantation. This study will allow the doctors to decipher the mechanisms of liver IRI in humans in a much better way than what has been achieved to date.
OTHER
NONE
Study Groups
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Static Cold Storage
The donor liver will be flushed in situ with 4C UW preservation solution (or HTK) through the aorta and portal vein, retrieved, and transported to the transplant centre in an icebox.
Machine Perfusion
The quality of DCD organs can be improved by replacing the icebox (static cold storage or SCS), which remains the main approach to preserve the livers after having been retrieved, by strategies that perfuse the livers in a machine (machine perfusion or MP). There are currently 3 MP strategies employed in the clinic: normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) is used in the donors by perfusing the liver with the donor's blood at 37 degrees Celsius, and normothermic (NMP) or hypothermic (HOPE) perfusion are used in the procured livers out of the body (using warm or cold perfusion fluids, respectively). To date, no controlled objective comparisons of these different MP strategies have been undertaken and the doctors do not have a good understanding of their mechanisms of action.
Normothermic Regional Perfusion
The donor aorta and inferior cava vein will be cannulated, followed by descending thoracic aorta cross-clamp and initiation of perfusion (Cardiohelp device) with the donor's own blood at 37C for 2h (while monitoring pump flow, venous O2 saturation, lactate and ALT), followed by in-situ flush with 4C preservation solution as in SCS arm.
Machine Perfusion
The quality of DCD organs can be improved by replacing the icebox (static cold storage or SCS), which remains the main approach to preserve the livers after having been retrieved, by strategies that perfuse the livers in a machine (machine perfusion or MP). There are currently 3 MP strategies employed in the clinic: normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) is used in the donors by perfusing the liver with the donor's blood at 37 degrees Celsius, and normothermic (NMP) or hypothermic (HOPE) perfusion are used in the procured livers out of the body (using warm or cold perfusion fluids, respectively). To date, no controlled objective comparisons of these different MP strategies have been undertaken and the doctors do not have a good understanding of their mechanisms of action.
Hypothermic oxygenated perfusion
The liver will be retrieved and preserved as in SCS arm. Then, on arrival to the transplant unit, the portal vein and hepatic artery will be cannulated, and the liver perfused with hypothermic oxygenated solution (VitaSmart device) for 2h.
Machine Perfusion
The quality of DCD organs can be improved by replacing the icebox (static cold storage or SCS), which remains the main approach to preserve the livers after having been retrieved, by strategies that perfuse the livers in a machine (machine perfusion or MP). There are currently 3 MP strategies employed in the clinic: normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) is used in the donors by perfusing the liver with the donor's blood at 37 degrees Celsius, and normothermic (NMP) or hypothermic (HOPE) perfusion are used in the procured livers out of the body (using warm or cold perfusion fluids, respectively). To date, no controlled objective comparisons of these different MP strategies have been undertaken and the doctors do not have a good understanding of their mechanisms of action.
Interventions
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Machine Perfusion
The quality of DCD organs can be improved by replacing the icebox (static cold storage or SCS), which remains the main approach to preserve the livers after having been retrieved, by strategies that perfuse the livers in a machine (machine perfusion or MP). There are currently 3 MP strategies employed in the clinic: normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) is used in the donors by perfusing the liver with the donor's blood at 37 degrees Celsius, and normothermic (NMP) or hypothermic (HOPE) perfusion are used in the procured livers out of the body (using warm or cold perfusion fluids, respectively). To date, no controlled objective comparisons of these different MP strategies have been undertaken and the doctors do not have a good understanding of their mechanisms of action.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Donor age ≥18 years.
3. Retrieval procedure allocated to KCH or UHB NORS teams.
4. Donor liver accepted for a patient at KCH or UHB transplant waiting list via the standard offering process.
5. Functional donor warm ischaemia (defined as a period between the systolic blood pressure \<50mmHg and aortic cold flush) ≤30 minutes.
6. Donor BMI \<35kg/m2.
7. Predicted cold ischaemic time \<8 hours.
8. Donor family has given consent to use donated liver for research.
1. Recipients 18 years of age or older.
2. Listed on an elective transplant waiting list.
3. First liver transplantation.
4. Suitable to receive a DCD graft based on the liver listing MDT.
5. Willingness to consent for the study participation.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Macroscopic evidence of fibrosis.
3. Liver weight \>2.5 kg.
4. Retrieval of cardiothoracic organs intended for transplantation.
5. Any medical condition that, in the opinion of the principal investigator, would interfere with safe completion of the trial.
1. High-risk surgical candidates (i.e. presence of extensive portomesenteric thrombosis, previous complex upper abdominal surgery).
2. Patients receiving super-urgent transplantation for acute and acute-on-chronic liver failure.
3. Patients unable to give full informed consent.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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King's College London
OTHER
King's College Hospital NHS Trust
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Alberto Sanchez-Fueyo
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
King's College London
Locations
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University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust
Birmingham, , United Kingdom
Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust
London, , United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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KCH23-156
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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