Title: Organ Preservation
1Organ Preservation with Histidine-Tryptophan-Ketog
lutarate (HTK) Solution Clinical Results
Charles M. Miller MD Director, Liver
Transplantation Program Professor of
Surgery Cleveland Clinic
2Organ Preservation Solutions
- Preservation solutions are used to maintain
the hypothermic organ in optimal condition from
the time of explantation until implantation
3Principles of Organ Preservation
- Exsanguination to reduce intravascular thrombosis
- Hypothermia to reduce cellular metabolism
- Maintain cell membrane integrity to avoid
cellular swelling - Susceptibility to cold ischemic injury vascular
endothelium gt parenchymal cells
4Ischemia
- Decreased mitochondrial function
- Anaerobic conditions - depletion of ATP
- Alterations in ion permeability
- Accumulation of lactate
- Accumulation of hypoxanthine
- Cell swelling
- Cytosolic calcium accumulation
5Reperfusion
- Generation of reactive oxygen species
- Increased oxidative stress
- Lipid peroxidation of cellular membranes
- Free radical formation leads to cellular
destruction - Results in macrophage/Kupffer cell activation
- Increased serum tumor necrosis factor (TNF)
- Damage can lead to prolonged hypoxia after
reperfusion
6History of Organ Preservation
- Simple cooling with cold solution
- Continuous hypothermic perfusion
- Collins (1967)
- Euro-Collins (1980)
- University of Wisconsin - ViaSpan (1986)
- HTK - Custodiol (1980s)
- Celsior - 1994
7Euro-Collins Solution
- High potassium, glucose, and phosphate-based
solution - Designed to mimic composition of intracellular
fluid - Low cost
- Poor preservation quality
- Short preservation times achievable
8UW Solution
Use of impermeant molecules, lactobionate and
raffinose, in preventing cell swelling First
developed for and applied in preservation of
canine pancreas Hydroxyethyl starch to minimize
interstitial edema during machine perfusion, not
necessary during cold storage High K, low
Na
9Southard and Belzer
10UW Solution Disadvantages
Glutathione is oxidized during storage
addition of fresh GSH immediately before use
other additives High viscosity Solution
cannot be released into circulation (high K
content) Huge particles 100 µm in diameter
contained in original solution must use in-line
filtration with 40 µm pore size.Particles caught
in capillary bed of perfused organ, resulting in
vascular constriction, impeded reperfusion, and
reduction of functional recovery
11Crystals in UW solution stored at sub-zero
temperature (a ) perfused livers (b)
pancreas (c) kidneys (d)
Tullius et al AJT 2627
12HTK Solution (Custodiol)
- Developed as cardioplegia
- Low potassium
- High buffering capacity of histidine
- No colloid - viscosity equal to that of pure
water from 1 to 350C, with mean flow rate 3X that
of UW solution at equal perfusion pressure -
organs exsanguinate and cool down to lower
temperatures more rapidly than with UW
13M.M. Gebhard, H.J. Kirlum, C. Schlegel. Organ
preservation with the solution HTK
14Component UW HTK
Sodium (mmol/L) 40 15
Pottasium (mmol/L) 120 10
Lactobionate (mmol/L) 100 -
Phosphate (mmol/L) 25 -
Raffinose (mmol/L) 30 -
Adenosine (mmol/L) 5 -
Ketoglutarate (mmol/L) - 1
Histidine (mmol/L) - 198
Starch (gm/L) 50 -
Mannitol (mmol/L) - 30
Tryptophan (mmol/L) - 2
Osmolality (mOsm/L) 320 310
15Randomized Controlled Trials
- Kidney 1 European, 3-year follow-up
- 1998, n 650 transplants, Deceased donors
- Pancreas 1 European
- 2009, n68 transplants
- Liver 3 European
- 1994 (n60) Deceased donors
- 2003 (n30) Living donors
- 2005 (n40) Deceased donors
16Kidney Preservation
Transplants HTK 332, UW 312 DGF Need for
dialysis 2 or more times during first 7-days
post-transplant Flush volume HTK 5 6
L UW 1 2 L EC 4 L
16
17Kidney preservation
de Boer, et al, Transpl Proc, 1999 31 2065
17
18Kidney preservation
18
de Boer, et al, Transpl Proc, 1999 31 2065
19Kidney preservation
19
Lynch RJ, et al. AJT 2008 8567-73
20Kidney preservation
Post-transplant kidney graft survival Living
Donor HTK n475 UW n475 Deceased
donor HTK n317 UW n317
20
Lynch RJ, et al. AJT 2008 8567-73
21Pancreas preservation
Transplants randomized 68 transplants over 18
months at 4 centers Outcomes 6-month graft
survival NO DIFFERENCE Graft function NO
DIFFERENCE Fasting BG C-peptide
level HbA1c Insulin requirement Flush
volume HTK 5 8 L n41 UW 3 L n67
21
22Pancreas preservation
Figure 1. No insulin requirement
Figure 2. Serum amylase level
Figure 3. Serum lipase level
22
23Pancreas preservation
Figure 4. C-peptide level
Figure 5. Units exogenous insulin
Figure 6. HbA1c
23
24Pancreas preservation
Indiana University, 2003 to 2007-- Largest center
in USA
N 310 HTK 262, UW 48 Simultaneous,
retrospective 1-year graft survival 91 (U.S.
79-86)
24
25Liver Transplantation
- Hatano et al Hepatic preservation with
histidine-tryptophan-ketoglutarate solution in
living-related and cadaveric liver
transplantation. Clinical Science (1997), 9381 - Evaluated graft oxygenation state after
reperfusion in LRLT using near-infrared (NIR)
tissue spectroscopy - LRD liver HTK (15) vs UW (49)
- CAD liver HTK (30) vs UW (18)
26E. Hatano, et al. Tissue oxygenation in living
related liver transplantation (Clinical Science,
1997)
LRLT
Intraoperative changes in mean value of oxygen
saturation of Hb at 10 points in liver graft
After reflow
of operation
27Biliary Complications Develop up to 30 of
Patients After Liver Transplantation
28Post-liver Transplant Biliary Strictures
- Biliary strictures after liver transplantation
10-30 - Adequate flushing of peri-biliary arterial tree
is important - High viscosity preservation solutions might not
completely flush the small donor peri-biliary
plexus
29Peri-Biliary Vascular Plexus
30Pirenne et al. Liver Transplantation, 7540-545,
2001
Pirenne et al. Liver Transplantation, 7540-545,
2001
- Two group of liver recipients
- Group 1 (24) Donor aortic flush with Marshall
solution - Portal vein
with UW - Group 2 (27) Donor aortic flush with UW
- Portal vein
with UW - CIT 692190 ( group 1) vs. 535129, (group 2),
(P.001) - Preservation cost 1.9 times greater in the UW
than in the Marshall group
31Pirenne et al. Liver Transplantation, 7540-545,
2001
- Recipient surgeon Same surgeon
- All biliary reconstruction duct-to-duct except in
one patient - One-year patient and graft survival 92 (1) and
100 (2) - Biliary stricture 1/24 (4.1) group 1
- 8/27 (29.2)
group 2 - Biliary stricture in group 1 4 months after LTX
and anastomotic -
- Biliary strictures in group 2 1-12 months after
LTX and anastomotic, extrahepatic, intrahepatic
or a combination of intra-and extrahepatic
32HTK and UW for Liver PreservationHannover (1988
- 2000) n 1068
- HTK UW
- n 461 607
- PF 439 578
- INF 22 29
- INF 4.8 4.8
- p 1.00
33HTK and UW for Liver PreservationHannover (1988
- 2000) n 1068
- CIT gt15 hours HTK UW
- n 36 154
- PF 34 143
- INF 2 11
- INF 5.6 7.1
- p 1.000
34Liver Transplant Patient Survival Hannover (1988
- 2000)
HTK (n 400)
UW (n 4 92)
P lt 0.0331 (LogRank)
years
35Liver Transplants Graft Survival Hannover (1988
- 2000)
HTK (n 461)
UW (n 607)
P lt 0.0029 (LogRank)
years
36HTK and UW for Liver PreservationHannover (1988
- 1998) n 836
- Biliary Tract Complications HTK
UW - n 305 531
- BTC 39 65
- BTC 12.8 12.2
37HTK vs. UWUniversity of Gottingen Patients and
Methods
Patients 123 120 Adults, 3 Children
Age 1 - 70 years Transplantations Total
134 Cadaveric 123 primary, 10 secondary, 1
tertiary 114 standard orthotopic, 5 split, 4
partial Living donation 11 (right
lobe) Combined 6 kidney transplantation 1
bone marrow transplantation 1 heart and
kidney transplantation Preservation solution 63
HTK und 71 UW
38HTK vs. UW University of Gottingen Initial
Liver Function
HTK UW OLT total 63
71 Initial function (IF) 45 (71.5) 43
(60.5) Initial dysfunction (IDF) 13
(20.6) 26 (36.6) Initial nonfunction (INF)
5 (7.9) 2 (2.8)
39HTK vs. UW University of Gottingen Biliary
Complications
HTK UW Bile duct necrosis 3 (16, 17,
485 d) 3 (44, 10, 8, 46 d) Localized
strictures 2 (72, 150 d) 2 (210, 305
d) Diffuse strictures (ITBL) - 3 (610, 210,
365 d) Total 5 8 ITBL ischemic type
biliary lesion
40HTK vs. UW University of Gottingen Biochemical
Parameters
HTK UW AST max (U/l) 1320 1254
1389 1214 pod 7 (U/l) 26.7
17.5 24.3 18.4 AP pod 7 (U/l) 159.7
94.6 214.8 109.2 GGT pod 7 (U/l)
81 52.9 84.6 59.5 Bilirubin pod 14
(mg/dL) 9.5 9.7 13.8 12.6
41HTK vs. UWUniversity of Gottingen Comparative
Analysis
- - Similar ischemic damage (AST) in both
groups. - Similar length of ICU stay in both groups.
- The rate of IDF/INF was similar in both groups.
- - Bilirubin was higher in UW group
- (13.8 vs. 9.5 mg/dL pod 14).
- Biliary complications significantly higher in
UW - group (8/71 vs. 5/63). No ITBL in the HTK
group.
42HTK solution for organ preservation in human
liver transplantationA prospective multi-center
observation study
- Pokorny et. al. Transplant International 2004
17256-260 (Austria, Germany) - 214 patients in 4 European centers (1996-1999)
- 5 liters of HTK for preservation CIT 444 224
- All vascular anastomoses completed before
reperfusion - No pre-reperfusion flush
- PNF 2.3, Initial dysfunction 6.5
- Graft dysfunction not correlated with CIT
- 1-year patient and graft survival 83 and 80
(unrelated to CIT) - HTK safe and effective and easy to use.
- Comparable to UW with less cost.
43HTK vs. UW in LDLT
- Chan et. al. Liver Transplantation 2004
101415-1421 (Hong Kong) - UW
HTK - Number of patients 30
30 - Age 38.5
35.5 - CIT 112 (79
334) 111.5 (75 222) - Biliary stricture 10 (33)
6 (20) - Pre-reperfusion flush Yes
No - Graft loss 0
1 - Hospital mortality 0
0 - Biochemistry No significant differences
- Cost analysis UW 137.6 higher than
HTK/patient - Not significant
44Liver Preservation
45Liver Preservation
Indiana University, 2001 to 2008
All adult, deceased donor n1013 HTK 632, UW
381 Simultaneous, retrospective
46Liver Preservation
Indiana University, 2001 to 2008
All adult, deceased donor Simultaneous,
retrospective n1013 HTK 632 UW 381
Serum ALT
Serum Bilirubin
47Liver Preservation
- 3 Randomized Studies
- 1. Erhard J, et al. Comparison of HTK versus UW
for organ preservation in human liver
transplantation A prospective, randomized study.
Transplant International 1994 7 177-81. - 60 deceased donor liver transplants (HTK n30
and UW n30) - No difference in early and late graft survival,
even for 7 donor livers with cold ischemia time
gt15 hrs - More late biliary complications in UW group.
- Higher initial transaminases in HTK group.
- 2. Testa G, et al. HTK versus UW in living donor
liver transplantation results of a prospective
study. Liver Transplantation 2003 9(8) 822-26. - 30 consecutive living donor right lobe
transplants flushed alternately with HTK (n16)
or UW (n14) - Patients were randomly allocated based upon
timing of transplantation - 1-year post-transplant, there is no difference
in graft and patient survival, liver enzymes and
complications - 3. Nardo B, et al. Preliminary results of a
clinical randomized study comparing Celsior and
HTK solutions in liver preservation for
transplantation. Transpl Proc 2005 37320-2. - European randomized trial comparing Celsior and
HTK. - No difference in initial function or survival up
to 1-year post-transplant.
48HTK vs. UW in liver transplantationA meta
analysis
Feng et.al. Liver Transplant, 2007
49HTK vs. UW in liver transplantation A meta
analysis
P 0.87 RR 1.01
Patient Survival
P 0.86 RR 1.01
Graft Survival
Feng et.al. Liver Transplant, 2007
50HTK vs. UW in liver transplantationA meta
analysis
Feng et.al. Liver Transplant, 2007
51HTK vs. UW in liver transplantationA meta
analysis
- Cost HTK cheaper than UW
- Biliary complications
- Trend for less biliary strictures with HTK
- PNF, PDF, DGF No difference
- Graft survival No difference
- Patient survival No difference
- Biochemical values No difference
Feng et.al. Liver Transplant, 2007
52Recent retrospective database reviews
Conclusion of all 3 These results suggest that
the increasing use of HTK for abdominal organ
preservation should be reexamined.
53Recent retrospective database reviews
- Data review
- Usually large database is better to increase
numbers - In large transplant research, single center
better to maintain homogeneous patient, donor and
management factors - Database review
- Selection bias
- Do surgeons who use HTK differ from those that
use UW ? - CONFOUNDING database differences likely just
highlight differences in practice patterns
between surgeons who use HTK and those who use UW
- Kidney study exclude all machine pumped kidneys
- Pancreas study unable to differentiate high
risk grafts - Liver study no ability to analyze steatosis,
hypernatremia, etc
53
54Histidine-Tryptophan-Ketoglutarate Solution Vs.
University of Wisconsin Solution for Deceased
Donor Liver Transplantation Analysis of SRTR
Database
55Purpose
- This analysis aims to evaluate the impact of the
organ preservation solutions (OPS)
,(Histidine-Tryptophan-Ketoglutarate (HTK) vs.
University of Wisconsin (UW) solution) on the
outcome of adult deceased donor liver
transplantation (DDLT) using the Scientific
Registry of Transplant Recipient (SRTR) database.
56Materials and Methods
- Only adult first liver-only transplants from
2002-2006 for whom both flush and storage
solutions were the same. Risk-unadjusted graft
survival was estimated non-parametrically by the
method of Kaplan and Meier, and parametrically by
a multiphase hazard decomposition method
57Statistical Analysis
- Risk factors for graft survival were determined
using nonproportional, multiphase, multivariable
hazard methodology. This methodology allows
modeling of recipient, donor, and procedure
variables in all phases of the hazard model
simultaneously. Bootstrap aggregating was used
for variable selection with a probability for
inclusion of 0.001 variables appearing in at
least 50 of bootstrap analyses were considered
reliably statistically significant at plt0.001.
58Patients
- The data set included 20,908 patients, 17,559
(84) with UW and 3349 (16) with HTK solutions.
Mean follow-up was 2.9 1.5 years (3.0 1.5
years for UW and 1.9 1.0 years for HTK). We
defined an early phase (EP) shortly after DDLT
followed by a constant phase (CP) of hazard for
graft failure.
59Results
- Significant predictors of graft failure in the EP
after DDLT include the following recipient
factors older age, race either White or Black,
portal vein thrombosis, last creatinine and last
MELD for the transplant (tx) candidacy, on life
support just prior to tx, and previous kidney tx.
60Risk Factors for Graft Failure - Early Phase
Risk Factor P Bootstrap
Early hazard phase
Older recipient age (years) lt.0001 93
Recipient race White or Black .0005 69
Recipient portal vein thrombosis lt.0001 95
Recipient previous abdominal surgery lt.0001 48
Candidate last creatinine (used for MELD) lt.0001 86
Candidate last MELD lt.0001 71
Recipient on life support just prior to tx lt.0001 100
Recipient previous kidney transplant lt.0001 90
Donor race non-White lt.0001 67
Donor donation after cardiac death lt.0001 100
Donor risk index lt.0001 46
61Risk Factors for Graft Failure - Constant Phase
Risk Factor P Bootstrap
Constant hazard phase
African American recipient lt.0001 97
Recipient tumor (incidental) at transplant lt.0001 88
Recipient primary diagnosis for tumors lt.0001 87
Recipient hepatitis C virus lt.0001 100
Donor age (years) lt.0001 97
Donor history of diabetes lt.0001 77
62Results
- Significant donor factors in the EP are race
other than White, donation after cardiac death
(DCD) and donor risk index (DRI). OPS did not
appear as a statistically significant predictor
of graft failure. Hospital death, re-transplant
rates (overall and within 14 days of initial
transplant) and relisting rates (overall and
within 30 days of tx) were similar (pgt0.05).
63Patient Survival - Donor gt65
- Donor Age gt 65
- N1698 UW
- N 311 HTK
- p.46 log rank test
64Patient Survival - Donor lt65
- Donor Age lt65
- N15861 UW
- N 3038 HTK
- p.28 log rank test
65Patient Survival - DCD Donor
- DCD Donor
- N570 UW
- N159 HTK
- p.73 log rank test
66Patient Survival - Non-DCD Donor
- Non-DCD Donor
- N16989 UW
- N3190 HTK
- p.55 log rank test
67Patient Survival - DRI gt2.5
- Donor DRI gt2.5
- N8663 UW
- N1682 HTK
- p.25 log rank test
68Patient Survival - DRI lt2.5
- Donor DRI lt2.5
- N6600 UW
- N1218 HTK
- p.37 log rank test
69Graft Survival - Donor Age gt65
- Donor Age gt65
- N1698 UW
- N 311 HTK
- p.64 log rank test
70Graft Survival - Donor Age lt65
- Donor Age lt65
- N15861 UW
- N 3038 HTK
- p.045 log rank test
71Graft Survival - DCD Donor
- DCD Donor
- N570 UW
- N159 HTK
- p.17 log rank test
72Kaplan-Meier Adult Graft Survival Primary
Deceased Donor Liver Transplants 2000-2006
SRTR
Includes adult, primary, liver alone transplants
73Graft Survival - Non-DCD Donor
- Non-DCD Donor
- N16989 UW
- N3190 HTK
- p.23 log rank test
74Graft Survival - DRI gt2.5
- Donor DRI gt2.5
- N8663 UW
- N1682 HTK
- p.053 log rank test
75Graft Survival - DRI lt2.5
- Donor DRI lt2.5
- N6600 UW
- N1218 HTK
- p.15 log rank test
76- Used casewise deletion of missing data, i.e.
threw out cases that were missing any of the
predictor variables they were studying. It means
they are using only patients for whom all
variables were reported - doing this can
potentially bias results
77SRTR Information Flow
SSDMF
OPTN
SRTR
Analysis File Creation
Reorganization for Research Cleaning and
Validation Analysis Variables Added
Data Use Agreements
Public Release
External Research
78Implications of Casewise Deletions
- While they do say that data were missing for less
than 4 of covariates, if the missing values were
scattered over 20 of patients, then 20 of total
data might have been deleted. - Example
- SRTR CIT data 100 complete
- UNOS CIT data 86 complete
79Critique
- Last transplant included was 2/28/08 - the paper
was submitted on 7/17/08. Assuming that it
took 45 days to analyze and write the paper, then
the data cutoff would have been 6/1/08. Given
that the first recipient follow-up form required
by UNOS is at 6 months and then they only release
data after a 60 day period for completion, they
only have data for transplants performed before
11/1/07
80(No Transcript)
81Other Considerations
- Slightly different timeframes
- is there a change in clinical practice?
- is there a learning curve for new users of HTK?
- Do the conclusions make sense?
- Recipient age 18-34 HR 1.14
- COD - CVA, HR 1.04 (SRTR HR 1.16)
- COD - DCD, HR 1.97 (SRTR HR 1.51)
82Does Not Fit Clinical Impressions
- Cleveland Clinic DCD experience
- 15 controlled DCD LTX preserved with HTK since
2005 - Heparin could not be given prior to declaration
of death - Mean donor age was 38 12 years
- Mean WIT and CIT was 25 9 min and 427 97 min,
respectively - No recipient developed ITBS. PNF was seen in one
recipient who was salvaged with retransplantation
83(No Transcript)
84Summary and Conclusions
- All randomized controlled trials large single
center case series, across multiple organs,
countries and time periods demonstrate no
difference in clinical outcomes between HTK and
UW - Question of appropriate flush volume - of
particular importance to the pancreas - There is a clear cost benefit in the use of HTK
- Recent database reviews of tens of thousands of
patients likely reflect difference in practice
patterns between surgeons who use HTK and those
who use UW. It is less likely to represent a
true difference in the clinical outcomes of the
two solutions when the vast majority of high
quality studies show no difference.
84
85Thank You