Synthetic hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers are an acceptable alternative for packed red blood cells in normothermic kidney perfusion

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Abstract

Normothermic machine perfusion presents a novel platform for pretransplant assessment and reconditioning of kidney grafts. Maintaining the metabolic activity of a preserved graft at physiologic levels requires an adequate oxygen supply, typically delivered by crystalloid solutions supplemented with red blood cells. In this study, we explored the feasibility of using a synthetic hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier (HBOC) in human kidney normothermic perfusion. Fourteen discarded human kidneys were perfused for 6 hours at a mean temperature of 37°C using a pressure-controlled system. Kidneys were perfused with a perfusion solution supplemented with either HBOC (n = 7) or packed red blood cells (PRBC) (n = 7) to increase oxygen-carrying capacity. Renal artery resistance, oxygen extraction, metabolic activity, energy stores, and histological features were evaluated. Throughout perfusion, kidneys from both groups exhibited comparable behavior regarding vascular flow (P =.66), oxygen consumption (P =.88), and reconstitution of tissue adenosine triphosphate (P =.057). Lactic acid levels were significantly higher in kidneys perfused with PRBC (P =.007). Histological findings were comparable between groups, and there was no evidence of histological damage caused by the HBOC. This feasibility experiment demonstrates that a HBOC solution can offer a logistically more convenient off-the-shelf alternative to PRBC in normothermic machine perfusion of human kidneys.

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Aburawi, M. M., Fontan, F. M., Karimian, N., Eymard, C., Cronin, S., Pendexter, C., … Markmann, J. F. (2019). Synthetic hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers are an acceptable alternative for packed red blood cells in normothermic kidney perfusion. American Journal of Transplantation, 19(10), 2814–2824. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajt.15375

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