Histopathologic and radiologic assessment of nontransplanted donor lungs.

American Journal of Transplantation(2020)

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摘要
Donor organ shortage results in significant waiting list mortality. Donor lung assessment is currently based on donors\u0027 history, gas exchange, chest X-ray, bronchoscopy findings, and ultimately in situ inspection but remains subjective. We correlated histopathology and radiology in nontransplanted donor lungs with the clinical indications to decline the offered organ. Sixty-two donor lungs, not used for transplantation (2010-2019), were procured, air-inflated, frozen, scanned with computed tomography, systematically sampled, and histologically and radiologically assessed. Thirty-nine (63%) lungs were declined for allograft-related reasons. In 13/39 (33%) lungs, histology could not confirm the reason for decline, in an additional 8/39 (21%) lungs, histologic abnormalities were only considered mild. In 16/39 (41%) lungs, radiology could not confirm the reason for decline. Twenty-three (37%) donor lungs were not transplanted due to extrapulmonary causes, of which three (13%) lungs displayed severe histologic abnormalities (pneumonia, n = 2; emphysema, n = 1), in addition to mild emphysema in 9 (39%) lungs and minor bronchopneumonia in 1 (4%). Radiology revealed ground-glass opacities in 8/23 (35%) and emphysema in 4/23 (17%) lungs. Histopathologic and radiologic assessment of nontransplanted donor lungs revealed substantial discrepancy with the clinical reason for decline. Optimization of donor lung assessment is necessary to improve current organ acceptance rates.
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clinical research / practice,lung transplantation / pulmonology,donors and donation: donor evaluation,donors and donation
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