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Donation After Circulatory Death Heart Transplant: Current State and Future Directions.

Amrin KharawalaSanjana NagrajJiyoung SeoSumant PargaonkarMayuko UeharaDaniel J GoldsteinSnehal R PatelDaniel B SimsUlrich P Jorde
Published in: Circulation. Heart failure (2024)
Orthotopic heart transplant is the gold standard therapeutic intervention for patients with end-stage heart failure. Conventionally, heart transplant has relied on donation after brain death for organ recovery. Donation after circulatory death (DCD) is the donation of the heart after confirming that circulatory function has irreversibly ceased. DCD-orthotopic heart transplant differs from donation after brain death-orthotopic heart transplant in ways that carry implications for widespread adoption, including differences in organ recovery, storage and ethical considerations surrounding normothermic regional perfusion with DCD. Despite these differences, DCD has shown promising early outcomes, augmenting the donor pool and allowing more individuals to benefit from orthotopic heart transplant. This review aims to present the current state and future trajectory of DCD-heart transplant, examine key differences between DCD and donation after brain death, including clinical experiences and innovations in methodologies, and address the ongoing ethical challenges surrounding the new frontier in heart transplant with DCD donors.
Keyphrases
  • heart failure
  • atrial fibrillation
  • type diabetes
  • extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
  • insulin resistance
  • blood brain barrier
  • skeletal muscle
  • brain injury
  • acute heart failure
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • weight loss