Mitochondrial injury during normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) and hypothermic oxygenated perfusion (HOPE) in a rodent model of DCD liver transplantation.

TitleMitochondrial injury during normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) and hypothermic oxygenated perfusion (HOPE) in a rodent model of DCD liver transplantation.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsPanconesi R, Carvalho MFlores, Eden J, Fazi M, Ansari F, Mancina L, Navari N, Da Silva RXavier Sou, Dondossola D, Borrego LBautista, Pietzke M, Peris A, Meierhofer D, Muiesan P, Galkin A, Marra F, Dutkowski P, Schlegel A
JournalEBioMedicine
Volume98
Pagination104861
Date Published2023 Nov 02
ISSN2352-3964
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) and hypothermic-oxygenated-perfusion (HOPE), were both shown to improve outcomes after liver transplantation from donors after circulatory death (DCD). Comparative clinical and mechanistical studies are however lacking.

METHODS: A rodent model of NRP and HOPE, both in the donor, was developed. Following asystolic donor warm ischemia time (DWIT), the abdominal compartment was perfused either with a donor-blood-based-perfusate at 37 °C (NRP) or with oxygenated Belzer-MPS at 10 °C (donor-HOPE) for 2 h. Livers were then procured and underwent 5 h static cold storage (CS), followed by transplantation. Un-perfused and HOPE-treated DCD-livers (after CS) and healthy livers (DBD) with direct implantation after NRP served as controls. Endpoints included the entire spectrum of ischemia-reperfusion-injury.

FINDINGS: Healthy control livers (DBD) showed minimal signs of inflammation during 2 h NRP and achieved 100% posttransplant recipient survival. In contrast, DCD livers with 30 and 60 min DWIT suffered from greater mitochondrial injury and inflammation as measured by increased perfusate Lactate, FMN- and HMGB-1-levels with subsequent Toll-like-receptor activation during NRP. In contrast, donor-HOPE (instead of NRP) led to significantly less mitochondrial-complex-I-injury and inflammation. Results after donor-HOPE were comparable to ex-situ HOPE after CS. Most DCD-liver recipients survived when treated with one HOPE-technique (86%), compared to only 40% after NRP (p = 0.0053). Following a reduction of DWIT (15 min), DCD liver recipients achieved comparable survivals with NRP (80%).

INTERPRETATION: High-risk DCD livers benefit more from HOPE-treatment, either immediately in the donor or after cold storage. Comparative prospective clinical studies are required to translate the results.

FUNDING: Funding was provided by the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant no: 32003B-140776/1, 3200B-153012/1, 320030-189055/1, and 31IC30-166909) and supported by University Careggi (grant no 32003B-140776/1) and the OTT (grant No.: DRGT641/2019, cod.prog. 19CT03) and the Max Planck Society. Work in the A.G. laboratory was partially supported by the NIH R01NS112381 and R21NS125466 grants.

DOI10.1016/j.ebiom.2023.104861
Alternate JournalEBioMedicine
PubMed ID37924707
PubMed Central IDPMC10660010
Grant ListR01 NS112381 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States
R21 NS125466 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States