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Development of a Novel Ex Vivo Porcine Hepatic Segmental Perfusion Proof-of-Concept Model Towards More Ethical Translational Research

Introduction Ex vivo machine perfusion describes the technique where organs are continuously perfused and oxygenated extracorporeally (at physiological conditions) to maintain the organs' viability. To our knowledge, there are currently no reported studies describing ex vivo perfusion of a sing...

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Autores principales: Kanani, Trisha, Isherwood, John, ElSamani, Kareem, Chung, Wen Y, West, Kevin, Oggioni, Marco R, Garcea, Giuseppe, Dennison, Ashley
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10027018/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36949973
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.35143
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author Kanani, Trisha
Isherwood, John
ElSamani, Kareem
Chung, Wen Y
West, Kevin
Oggioni, Marco R
Garcea, Giuseppe
Dennison, Ashley
author_facet Kanani, Trisha
Isherwood, John
ElSamani, Kareem
Chung, Wen Y
West, Kevin
Oggioni, Marco R
Garcea, Giuseppe
Dennison, Ashley
author_sort Kanani, Trisha
collection PubMed
description Introduction Ex vivo machine perfusion describes the technique where organs are continuously perfused and oxygenated extracorporeally (at physiological conditions) to maintain the organs' viability. To our knowledge, there are currently no reported studies describing ex vivo perfusion of a single hepatic segment. Here, we describe the development of a porcine ex vivo hepatic segmental perfusion model to demonstrate proof of concept and support further research into the ex vivo perfusion of the human liver using discarded tissue.  Methods Whole livers were retrieved from abattoir-derived pigs and connected to a normothermic extracorporeal perfusion circuit. Constant segmental perfusion via the common or segmental hepatic artery and portal vein with heparinised autologous blood was established. The viability of the perfused organ was assessed by monitoring perfusion pressures, flow rates and histology samples. Results Following perfusion and optimisation of the model for three hepatic segments, the third perfusion demonstrated viable hepatocytes centrally after 4 h of segmental perfusion. Conclusion Ex vivo hepatic segmental perfusion is technically challenging but its success in a porcine model and the principles learned should facilitate the development of an analogous human model using discarded tissue following formal liver resections. The model would use a healthy liver segment following a major formal resection such as a hemi-hepatectomy and ex vivo perfusion performed via a segmental hepatic artery and portal vein. If successful this model would represent a significant development and enable ethical translation research to assess the response of human livers to a variety of stressors, including toxicity and infection.
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spelling pubmed-100270182023-03-21 Development of a Novel Ex Vivo Porcine Hepatic Segmental Perfusion Proof-of-Concept Model Towards More Ethical Translational Research Kanani, Trisha Isherwood, John ElSamani, Kareem Chung, Wen Y West, Kevin Oggioni, Marco R Garcea, Giuseppe Dennison, Ashley Cureus General Surgery Introduction Ex vivo machine perfusion describes the technique where organs are continuously perfused and oxygenated extracorporeally (at physiological conditions) to maintain the organs' viability. To our knowledge, there are currently no reported studies describing ex vivo perfusion of a single hepatic segment. Here, we describe the development of a porcine ex vivo hepatic segmental perfusion model to demonstrate proof of concept and support further research into the ex vivo perfusion of the human liver using discarded tissue.  Methods Whole livers were retrieved from abattoir-derived pigs and connected to a normothermic extracorporeal perfusion circuit. Constant segmental perfusion via the common or segmental hepatic artery and portal vein with heparinised autologous blood was established. The viability of the perfused organ was assessed by monitoring perfusion pressures, flow rates and histology samples. Results Following perfusion and optimisation of the model for three hepatic segments, the third perfusion demonstrated viable hepatocytes centrally after 4 h of segmental perfusion. Conclusion Ex vivo hepatic segmental perfusion is technically challenging but its success in a porcine model and the principles learned should facilitate the development of an analogous human model using discarded tissue following formal liver resections. The model would use a healthy liver segment following a major formal resection such as a hemi-hepatectomy and ex vivo perfusion performed via a segmental hepatic artery and portal vein. If successful this model would represent a significant development and enable ethical translation research to assess the response of human livers to a variety of stressors, including toxicity and infection. Cureus 2023-02-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10027018/ /pubmed/36949973 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.35143 Text en Copyright © 2023, Kanani et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle General Surgery
Kanani, Trisha
Isherwood, John
ElSamani, Kareem
Chung, Wen Y
West, Kevin
Oggioni, Marco R
Garcea, Giuseppe
Dennison, Ashley
Development of a Novel Ex Vivo Porcine Hepatic Segmental Perfusion Proof-of-Concept Model Towards More Ethical Translational Research
title Development of a Novel Ex Vivo Porcine Hepatic Segmental Perfusion Proof-of-Concept Model Towards More Ethical Translational Research
title_full Development of a Novel Ex Vivo Porcine Hepatic Segmental Perfusion Proof-of-Concept Model Towards More Ethical Translational Research
title_fullStr Development of a Novel Ex Vivo Porcine Hepatic Segmental Perfusion Proof-of-Concept Model Towards More Ethical Translational Research
title_full_unstemmed Development of a Novel Ex Vivo Porcine Hepatic Segmental Perfusion Proof-of-Concept Model Towards More Ethical Translational Research
title_short Development of a Novel Ex Vivo Porcine Hepatic Segmental Perfusion Proof-of-Concept Model Towards More Ethical Translational Research
title_sort development of a novel ex vivo porcine hepatic segmental perfusion proof-of-concept model towards more ethical translational research
topic General Surgery
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10027018/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36949973
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.35143
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