Non-heart-beating donation

Prior to the introduction of brain death into law in the mid to late 1970s, all organ transplants from cadaveric donors came from non-heart-beating donors (NHBDs).[1]

Donors after brain death (DBD) (beating heart cadavers), however, led to better results as the organs were perfused with oxygenated blood until the point of perfusion and cooling at organ retrieval, and so NHBDs were generally no longer used except in Japan, where brain death was not legally or culturally recognized, until very recently.[2]

However, a growing discrepancy between demand for organs and their availability from DBDs has led to a re-examination of using non-heart-beating donations, DCD (Donation after Circulatory Death,[3] or Donation after Cardiac Death[4]), and many centres are now using such donations to expand their potential pool of organs.

Tissue donation (corneas, heart valves, skin, bone) has always been possible for NHBDs, and many centres now have established programmes for kidney transplants from such donors. A few centres have also moved into DCD liver and lung transplants. Many lessons have been learnt since the 1970s, and results from current DCDs transplants are comparable to transplants from DBDs.[5]

  1. ^ Ridley, S; Bonner, S; Bray, K; Falvey, S; MacKay, J; Manara, A (2005). "UK guidance for non-heart-beating donation". British Journal of Anaesthesia. 95 (5): 592–5. doi:10.1093/bja/aei235. PMID 16183683.
  2. ^ Lock, Margaret (2002). Twice Dead: Organ Transplants and the Reinvention of Death. University of California Press. p. 130. ISBN 0-520-22605-4.
  3. ^ Manara AR, Murphy PG, O'Callaghan G (2012). "Donation after circulatory death" (PDF). British Journal of Anaesthesia. 108 (Suppl 1): i108–i121. doi:10.1093/bja/aer357. PMID 22194426.
  4. ^ "Donation After Cardiac Death (DCD)". Transplant Center. UC Davis Health. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  5. ^ Summers, Dominic M; Johnson, Rachel J; Allen, Joanne; Fuggle, Susan V; Collett, David; Watson, Christopher J; Bradley, J Andrew (2010). "Analysis of factors that affect outcome after transplantation of kidneys donated after cardiac death in the UK: A cohort study". The Lancet. 376 (9749): 1303–11. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(10)60827-6. PMID 20727576. S2CID 23632192.