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Interstitial Glucose Metabolism Monitoring as an Additional Method for Objective Assessment of Donor Liver, Prediction and Immediate Diagnosis of Early Graft Dysfunction

The current clinical practice of assessing the quality and suitability of a donor liver for human transplantation does not exclude cases of primary graft dysfunction of the transplanted organ and, at the same time, leads to an unreasonable refusal to transplant a significant number of functionally s...

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Autores principales: Sushkov, A.I., Voskanyan, S.E., Rudakov, V.S., Popov, M.V., Gubarev, K.K., Svetlakova, D.S., Artemiev, A.I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Privolzhsky Research Medical University 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10090915/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37064804
http://dx.doi.org/10.17691/stm2022.14.3.04
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author Sushkov, A.I.
Voskanyan, S.E.
Rudakov, V.S.
Popov, M.V.
Gubarev, K.K.
Svetlakova, D.S.
Artemiev, A.I.
author_facet Sushkov, A.I.
Voskanyan, S.E.
Rudakov, V.S.
Popov, M.V.
Gubarev, K.K.
Svetlakova, D.S.
Artemiev, A.I.
author_sort Sushkov, A.I.
collection PubMed
description The current clinical practice of assessing the quality and suitability of a donor liver for human transplantation does not exclude cases of primary graft dysfunction of the transplanted organ and, at the same time, leads to an unreasonable refusal to transplant a significant number of functionally suitable organs. In this regard, searching for new methods for additional objective assessment and monitoring of the state of donor organs in the peritransplant period is relevant. The aim of the study was to determine the clinical utility of monitoring interstitial concentrations of glucose and its metabolites to assess the viability and functional state of a donor liver before and after human transplantation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective observational single-center study included 32 cases of liver transplantation. Along with standard methods for assessing the initial function of grafts during the first week after surgery, interstitial (in the transplanted liver) concentrations of glucose and its metabolites were monitored. In 18 cases, the interstitial glucose metabolism was also studied during static cold storage (SCS). RESULTS: With the development of early allograft dysfunction (EAD), compared with the uneventful post-transplant period, statistically significantly higher interstitial lactate concentrations were observed as early as 3 h after reperfusion: 12.3 [10.1; 15.6] mmol/L versus 7.2 [3.9; 9.9] mmol/L (p=0.003). A value above 8.8 mmol/L may be considered as a criterion for the immediate diagnosis of EAD (sensitivity — 89%, specificity — 65%). Interstitial lactate concentration at the end of SCS and the area under the “lactate concentration–SCS duration” curve were associated with the initial graft function. Values of these parameters greater than 15.4 mmol/L and 76.1 mmol/L·h, respectively, with a sensitivity of 100% in both cases and a specificity of 77 and 85%, may be used to assess the risk of primary EAD. CONCLUSION: Monitoring of interstitial concentrations of glucose and its metabolites, primarily, lactate, is an objective additional method for the assessment of the donor liver viability both during SCS and in the early postoperative period.
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spelling pubmed-100909152023-04-13 Interstitial Glucose Metabolism Monitoring as an Additional Method for Objective Assessment of Donor Liver, Prediction and Immediate Diagnosis of Early Graft Dysfunction Sushkov, A.I. Voskanyan, S.E. Rudakov, V.S. Popov, M.V. Gubarev, K.K. Svetlakova, D.S. Artemiev, A.I. Sovrem Tekhnologii Med Clinical Supplements The current clinical practice of assessing the quality and suitability of a donor liver for human transplantation does not exclude cases of primary graft dysfunction of the transplanted organ and, at the same time, leads to an unreasonable refusal to transplant a significant number of functionally suitable organs. In this regard, searching for new methods for additional objective assessment and monitoring of the state of donor organs in the peritransplant period is relevant. The aim of the study was to determine the clinical utility of monitoring interstitial concentrations of glucose and its metabolites to assess the viability and functional state of a donor liver before and after human transplantation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective observational single-center study included 32 cases of liver transplantation. Along with standard methods for assessing the initial function of grafts during the first week after surgery, interstitial (in the transplanted liver) concentrations of glucose and its metabolites were monitored. In 18 cases, the interstitial glucose metabolism was also studied during static cold storage (SCS). RESULTS: With the development of early allograft dysfunction (EAD), compared with the uneventful post-transplant period, statistically significantly higher interstitial lactate concentrations were observed as early as 3 h after reperfusion: 12.3 [10.1; 15.6] mmol/L versus 7.2 [3.9; 9.9] mmol/L (p=0.003). A value above 8.8 mmol/L may be considered as a criterion for the immediate diagnosis of EAD (sensitivity — 89%, specificity — 65%). Interstitial lactate concentration at the end of SCS and the area under the “lactate concentration–SCS duration” curve were associated with the initial graft function. Values of these parameters greater than 15.4 mmol/L and 76.1 mmol/L·h, respectively, with a sensitivity of 100% in both cases and a specificity of 77 and 85%, may be used to assess the risk of primary EAD. CONCLUSION: Monitoring of interstitial concentrations of glucose and its metabolites, primarily, lactate, is an objective additional method for the assessment of the donor liver viability both during SCS and in the early postoperative period. Privolzhsky Research Medical University 2022 2022-05-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10090915/ /pubmed/37064804 http://dx.doi.org/10.17691/stm2022.14.3.04 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY 4.0 license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Clinical Supplements
Sushkov, A.I.
Voskanyan, S.E.
Rudakov, V.S.
Popov, M.V.
Gubarev, K.K.
Svetlakova, D.S.
Artemiev, A.I.
Interstitial Glucose Metabolism Monitoring as an Additional Method for Objective Assessment of Donor Liver, Prediction and Immediate Diagnosis of Early Graft Dysfunction
title Interstitial Glucose Metabolism Monitoring as an Additional Method for Objective Assessment of Donor Liver, Prediction and Immediate Diagnosis of Early Graft Dysfunction
title_full Interstitial Glucose Metabolism Monitoring as an Additional Method for Objective Assessment of Donor Liver, Prediction and Immediate Diagnosis of Early Graft Dysfunction
title_fullStr Interstitial Glucose Metabolism Monitoring as an Additional Method for Objective Assessment of Donor Liver, Prediction and Immediate Diagnosis of Early Graft Dysfunction
title_full_unstemmed Interstitial Glucose Metabolism Monitoring as an Additional Method for Objective Assessment of Donor Liver, Prediction and Immediate Diagnosis of Early Graft Dysfunction
title_short Interstitial Glucose Metabolism Monitoring as an Additional Method for Objective Assessment of Donor Liver, Prediction and Immediate Diagnosis of Early Graft Dysfunction
title_sort interstitial glucose metabolism monitoring as an additional method for objective assessment of donor liver, prediction and immediate diagnosis of early graft dysfunction
topic Clinical Supplements
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10090915/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37064804
http://dx.doi.org/10.17691/stm2022.14.3.04
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