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Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2012

Ten-Year Outcome after Rapid Discontinuation of Prednisone in Adult Primary Kidney Transplantation

Michael D. Rizzari; Thomas M. Suszynski; Kristen J. Gillingham; Ty B. Dunn; Hassan N. Ibrahim; William D. Payne; Srinath Chinnakotla; Erik B. Finger; David E. R. Sutherland; Raja Kandaswamy; John S. Najarian; Timothy L. Pruett; Aleksandra Kukla; Richard Spong; Arthur J. Matas

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Rapid discontinuation of prednisone after kidney transplantation potentially allows for minimization of steroid-related side effects. Although intermediate-term data with rapid discontinuation of prednisone have been promising, concern still exists regarding long-term outcomes. The 10-year experience is reported herein. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS Between October 1, 1999 and December 31, 2010, 1241 adult primary kidney transplants (791 living donor and 450 deceased donor) were performed using a protocol in which prednisone is discontinued after postoperative day 5. The 10-year actuarial recipient and graft survival rates and prednisone-related side effects were studied. RESULTS Ten-year actuarial patient survival was 71% for living donor transplants and 62% for deceased donor transplants; 10-year graft survival was 61% for living donor transplants and 51% for deceased donor transplants, and was comparable to 10-year Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients national data. Ten-year death-censored graft survival was 79% for living donor transplants and 80% for deceased donor transplants. Ten-year acute rejection rates were 25% for deceased donor transplants and 31% for living donor transplants; 10-year chronic rejection (interstitial fibrosis/tubular atrophy) rates were 39% for deceased donor transplants and 47% for living donor transplants. For nondiabetic recipients of living donor or deceased donor allografts, the incidence of new-onset diabetes was significantly lower than in historical controls on prednisone (P<0.001). We also found significantly reduced rates of cataracts, avascular necrosis, and cytomegalovirus infection in some subgroups. CONCLUSIONS Prednisone-related side effects can be minimized in a protocol incorporating rapid discontinuation of prednisone for maintenance immunosuppression. Ten-year patient and graft outcomes remain acceptable.


Transplantation | 2010

OXYGEN PERSUFFLATION INCREASES PANCREATIC ATP LEVELS AND VIABLE ISLET YIELD FOLLOWING 24 HOURS PRESERVATION COMPARED WITH THE TWO-LAYER METHOD (TLM): 1196

W. E. Scott; Efstathios S. Avgoustiniatos; J. Ferrer-Fabrega; Bradley P. Weegman; V. A. Kircner; Takayuki Anazawa; Michael D. Rizzari; L. S. Kidder; S. A. Stein; S. Matsumoto; J. J. Stone; Thomas M. Suszynski; Tor C. Aasheim; B. E. Hammer; A. N. Balamurugan; T. D. OʼBrien; M. P. Murtaugh; L. A. Tempelman; David E. R. Sutherland; Bernhard J. Hering; Klearchos K. Papas

W.E. Scott III1, E.S. Avgoustiniatos2, J. Ferrer-Fabrega2, B.P. Weegman2, V.A. Kircner2, T. Anazawa3, M.D. Rizzari4, L.S. Kidder2, S.A. Stein2, S. Matsumoto2, J.J. Stone2, T.M. Suszynski5, T.C. Aasheim2, B.E. Hammer6, A.N. Balamurugan2, T.D. O’Brien7, M.P. Murtaugh8, L.A. Tempelman9, D.E. Sutherland2, B.J. Hering2, K.K. Papas2 1, , St. Paul/MN/UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis/UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 3Organ Regenerative Surgery, Fukushima Medical University, Fukushima/ Fukushima/JAPAN, 4Department Of Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis/Minnesota/UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 5Department Of Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis/MN/UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 6Radiology, University of Minnestoa, Minneapolis/MN/UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 7Veterinary Population Medicine, University of Minnestoa, St. Paul/MN/UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 8Veterinary Biosciences, University of Minnestoa, St. Paul/MN/UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 9, Giner Inc., Newton/MA/UNITED STATES OF AMERICA


Transplantation Proceedings | 2010

Pancreas Oxygen Persufflation Increases ATP Levels as Shown by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

W. E. Scott; Bradley P. Weegman; J. Ferrer-Fabrega; S.A. Stein; Takayuki Anazawa; Varvara A. Kirchner; Michael D. Rizzari; J. Stone; S. Matsumoto; Bruce E. Hammer; A. N. Balamurugan; Louis S. Kidder; Thomas M. Suszynski; Efstathios S. Avgoustiniatos; S.G. Stone; Linda A. Tempelman; David E. R. Sutherland; Bernhard J. Hering; Klearchos K. Papas

BACKGROUND Islet transplantation is a promising treatment for type 1 diabetes. Due to a shortage of suitable human pancreata, high cost, and the large dose of islets presently required for long-term diabetes reversal; it is important to maximize viable islet yield. Traditional methods of pancreas preservation have been identified as suboptimal due to insufficient oxygenation. Enhanced oxygen delivery is a key area of improvement. In this paper, we explored improved oxygen delivery by persufflation (PSF), ie, vascular gas perfusion. METHODS Human pancreata were obtained from brain-dead donors. Porcine pancreata were procured by en bloc viscerectomy from heparinized donation after cardiac death donors and were either preserved by either two-layer method (TLM) or PSF. Following procurement, organs were transported to a 1.5-T magnetic resonance (MR) system for (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to investigate their bioenergetic status by measuring the ratio of adenosine triphosphate to inorganic phosphate (ATP:P(i)) and for assessing PSF homogeneity by MRI. RESULTS Human and porcine pancreata can be effectively preserved by PSF. MRI showed that pancreatic tissue was homogeneously filled with gas. TLM can effectively raise ATP:P(i) levels in rat pancreata but not in larger porcine pancreata. ATP:P(i) levels were almost undetectable in porcine organs preserved with TLM. When human or porcine organs were preserved by PSF, ATP:P(i) was elevated to levels similar to those observed in rat pancreata. CONCLUSION The methods developed for human and porcine pancreas PSF homogeneously deliver oxygen throughout the organ. This elevates ATP levels during preservation and may improve islet isolation outcomes while enabling the use of marginal donors, thus expanding the usable donor pool.


Cryobiology | 2012

Persufflation (or Gaseous Oxygen Perfusion) as a Method of Organ Preservation

Thomas M. Suszynski; Michael D. Rizzari; W. E. Scott; Linda A. Tempelman; Michael J. Taylor; Klearchos K. Papas

Improved preservation techniques have the potential to improve transplant outcomes by better maintaining donor organ quality and by making more organs available for allotransplantation. Persufflation, (PSF, gaseous oxygen perfusion) is potentially one such technique that has been studied for over a century in a variety of tissues, but has yet to gain wide acceptance for a number of reasons. A principal barrier is the perception that ex vivo PSF will cause in vivo embolization post-transplant. This review summarizes the extensive published work on heart, liver, kidney, small intestine and pancreas PSF, discusses the differences between anterograde and retrograde PSF, and between PSF and other conventional methods of organ preservation (static cold storage, hypothermic machine perfusion). Prospective implications of PSF within the broader field of organ transplantation, and in the specific application with pancreatic islet isolation and transplant are also discussed. Finally, key issues that need to be addressed before PSF becomes a more widely utilized preservation strategy are summarized and discussed.


Transplantation | 2011

Consideration of donor age and human leukocyte antigen matching in the setting of multiple potential living kidney donors.

Michael D. Rizzari; Thomas M. Suszynski; Kristen J. Gillingham; Arthur J. Matas

Background. Defining living donor (LD)-related risk factors affecting kidney transplant outcome will allow better donor selection and more educated informed consent when there is more than one potential donor. We studied risk factors in a large cohort at a single institution. Methods. We reviewed 1632 recipients who underwent LD kidney transplantation at the University of Minnesota between January 1, 1990, and October 1, 2009. Using Cox regression, we studied the effect of donor and recipient risk factors on patient and graft survival. We specifically examined the effect of donor age and human leukocyte antigen (HLA) matching because these are variables that may help clinical decision making when multiple potential donors exist. Results. Mean donor age was 40.6 years for all transplants; 180 (11%) donors were 55 years or older, and 24 (1.5%) donors were older than 65 years. Mean number of HLA mismatches (per transplant) was 2.9 (29.2% of recipients had one to two HLA mismatches, 39.8% had three to four HLA mismatches, and 25% had five to six HLA mismatches). Donor age more than 65 years, five to six HLA mismatches, delayed graft function, and acute rejection were independent predictors of decreased patient and graft survival. When controlling for recipient age, donor age more than 65 years remained a risk factor for worse outcome. Conclusions. Our data suggest that advanced donor age (>65 years) and degree of HLA mismatch (≥5) are independent donor-related risk factors associated with worse outcome. When multiple potential LDs exist, it may be ideal to attempt to use a donor younger than 65 years and with less than five HLA mismatches.


Transplantation Proceedings | 2010

Persufflation Improves Pancreas Preservation When Compared With the Two-Layer Method

W. E. Scott; Timothy D. O'Brien; J. Ferrer-Fabrega; Efstathios S. Avgoustiniatos; Bradley P. Weegman; Takayuki Anazawa; S. Matsumoto; Varvara A. Kirchner; Michael D. Rizzari; Michael P. Murtaugh; Thomas M. Suszynski; Tor C. Aasheim; Louis S. Kidder; Bruce E. Hammer; S.G. Stone; Linda A. Tempelman; David E. R. Sutherland; Bernhard J. Hering; Klearchos K. Papas

Islet transplantation is emerging as a promising treatment for patients with type 1 diabetes. It is important to maximize viable islet yield for each organ due to scarcity of suitable human donor pancreata, high cost, and the large dose of islets required for insulin independence. However, organ transport for 8 hours using the two-layer method (TLM) frequently results in low islet yields. Since efficient oxygenation of the core of larger organs (eg, pig, human) in TLM has recently come under question, we investigated oxygen persufflation as an alternative way to supply the pancreas with oxygen during preservation. Porcine pancreata were procured from donors after cardiac death and preserved by either TLM or persufflation for 24 hours and subsequently fixed. Biopsies collected from several regions of the pancreas were sectioned, stained with hematoxylin and eosin, and evaluated by a histologist. Persufflated tissues exhibited distended capillaries and significantly less autolysis/cell death relative to regions not exposed to persufflation or to tissues preserved with TLM. The histology presented here suggests that after 24 hours of preservation, persufflation dramatically improves tissue health when compared with TLM. These results indicate the potential for persufflation to improve viable islet yields and extend the duration of preservation, allowing more donor organs to be utilized.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2013

Prospective Randomized Trial of Maintenance Immunosuppression With Rapid Discontinuation of Prednisone in Adult Kidney Transplantation

Thomas M. Suszynski; Kristen J. Gillingham; Michael D. Rizzari; Ty B. Dunn; William D. Payne; Srinath Chinnakotla; Erik B. Finger; David E. R. Sutherland; John S. Najarian; Timothy L. Pruett; Arthur J. Matas; Raja Kandaswamy

Rapid discontinuation of prednisone (RDP) has minimized steroid‐related complications following kidney transplant (KT). This trial compares long‐term (10‐year) outcomes with three different maintenance immunosuppressive protocols following RDP in adult KT. Recipients (n = 440; 73% living donor) from March 2001 to April 2006 were randomized into one of three arms: cyclosporine (CSA) and mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) (CSA/MMF, n = 151); high‐level tacrolimus (TAC, 8–12 μg/L) and low‐level sirolimus (SIR, 3–7 μg/L) (TACH/SIRL, n = 149) or low‐level TAC (3–7 μg/L) and high‐level SIR (8–12 μg/L) (TACL/SIRH, n = 140). Median follow‐up was ∼7 years. There were no differences between arms in 10‐year actuarial patient, graft and death‐censored graft survival or in allograft function. There were no differences in the 10‐year actuarial rates of biopsy‐proven acute rejection (30%, 26% and 20% in CSA/MMF, TACH/SIRL and TACL/SIRH) and chronic rejection (38%, 35% and 31% in CSA/MMF, TACH/SIRL and TACL/SIRH). Rates of new‐onset diabetes mellitus were higher with TACH/SIRL (p = 0.04), and rates of anemia were higher with TACH/SIRL and TACL/SIRH (p = 0.04). No differences were found in the overall rates of 16 other post‐KT complications. These data indicate that RDP‐based protocol yield acceptable 10‐year outcomes, but side effects differ based on the maintenance regimen used and should be considered when optimizing immunosuppression following RDP.


Transplantation Proceedings | 2010

Continuous Real-time Viability Assessment of Kidneys Based on Oxygen Consumption

Bradley P. Weegman; Varvara A. Kirchner; W. E. Scott; Efstathios S. Avgoustiniatos; Thomas M. Suszynski; J. Ferrer-Fabrega; Michael D. Rizzari; Louis S. Kidder; Raja Kandaswamy; David E. R. Sutherland; Klearchos K. Papas

BACKGROUND Current ex vivo quality assessment of donor kidneys is limited to vascular resistance measurements and histological analysis. New techniques for the assessment of organ quality before transplantation may further improve clinical outcomes while expanding the depleted deceased-donor pool. We propose the measurement of whole organ oxygen consumption rate (WOOCR) as a method to assess the quality of kidneys in real time before transplantation. METHODS Five porcine kidneys were procured using a donation after cardiac death (DCD) model. The renal artery and renal vein were cannulated and the kidney connected to a custom-made hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) system equipped with an inline oxygenator and fiber-optic oxygen sensors. Kidneys were perfused at 8 degrees C, and the perfusion parameters and partial oxygen pressures (pO(2)) were measured to calculate WOOCR. RESULTS Without an inline oxygenator, the pO(2) of the perfusion solution at the arterial inlet and venous outlet diminished to near 0 within minutes. However, once adequate oxygenation was provided, a significant pO(2) difference was observed and used to calculate the WOOCR. The WOOCR was consistently measured from presumably healthy kidneys, and results suggest that it can be used to differentiate between healthy and purposely damaged organs. CONCLUSIONS Custom-made HMP systems equipped with an oxygenator and inline oxygen sensors can be applied for WOOCR measurements. We suggest that WOOCR is a promising approach for the real-time quality assessment of kidneys and other organs during preservation before transplantation.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2012

Energetic recovery in porcine grafts by minimally invasive liver oxygenation

Thomas Minor; W. E. Scott; Michael D. Rizzari; Thomas M. Suszynski; Bastian Lüer; Patrik Efferz; Klearchos K. Papas; Andreas Paul

BACKGROUND Gaseous insufflation of oxygen via the venous vascular system has proven to be an effective tool for preventing anoxic tissue injury after extended time periods of ischemic liver preservation. Most experimental studies so far have been undertaken in rat models and include a series of pinpricks into postsinusoidal venules as an outlet for the insufflated gas. Here, we describe a simplified technique for minimally invasive liver oxygenation in porcine grafts, representing a hassle-free access to organ oxygenation without vascular lesions. METHODS We retrieved livers from Landrace pigs and cold-stored them in histidine-tryptophan-ketoglutarate solution. Subsequent to 18 h preservation, we treated some livers for an additional 2 h with gaseous oxygen, insufflated via silicone tubing inserted into the suprahepatic caval vein. Gas pressure was limited to 18 mm Hg. We occluded the infrahepatic caval vein with a bulldog clamp. Gas bubbles left the graft via the portal vein. We assessed liver integrity by energetic tissue status and by controlled in vitro reperfusion with autologous blood. RESULTS Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated homogeneous gas distribution in the persufflated tissue without major shunting. Biochemical analyses revealed effective and homogeneous restoration of energetic homeostasis in the ischemic graft before reperfusion. Sinusoidal endothelial clearance of hyaluronic acid was significantly improved upon reperfusion, as was hepatic arterial flow. Parenchymal enzyme loss was concordantly mitigated after minimally invasive liver oxygenation. CONCLUSIONS Our results indicate that gaseous oxygen persufflation of the porcine liver is possible without tissue trauma, and significantly enhances post-preservation recovery of the graft.


Clinical Transplantation | 2012

Outcome of living kidney donors left with multiple renal arteries

Michael D. Rizzari; Thomas M. Suszynski; Kristen J. Gillingham; Arthur J. Matas; Hassan N. Ibrahim

Rizzari MD, Suszynski TM, Gillingham KJ, Matas AJ, Ibrahim HN. Outcome of living kidney donors left with multiple renal arteries. 
Clin Transplant 2012: 26: E7–E11. 
© 2011 John Wiley & Sons A/S.

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W. E. Scott

University of Minnesota

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