International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2022)

A Proof-of-Concept Preclinical Study Using a Novel Thermal Insulation Device in a Porcine Kidney Auto-Transplantation Model

  • Lisa Ernst,
  • Zoltan Czigany,
  • Pascal Paschenda,
  • Mareike Schulz,
  • Lukas Breuer,
  • Janosch Kunczik,
  • Michael Czaplik,
  • Wenjia Liu,
  • Decan Jiang,
  • Uwe Klinge,
  • Sonja Djudjaj,
  • Peter Boor,
  • Georg Lurje,
  • Eiji Kobayashi,
  • René H. Tolba

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232213806
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 22
p. 13806

Abstract

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Ischemia-reperfusion injury remains a fundamental problem during organ transplantation logistics. One key technical factor is the rapid allograft rewarming during the time of vascular reconstruction in the recipient. In this pilot study, a new thermal insulation bag (TIB) for organ transplantation was used. Insulation capacity, tissue compatibility, and usability were tested initially ex vivo on porcine kidneys (n = 24) followed by the first in vivo usage. Fourteen female German landrace pigs underwent kidney auto-transplantation after 24 h cold storage (4 °C). During the implantation process the kidney was either insulated with the new TIB, or it was not thermo-protected at all, which represents the clinical standard. In this proof-of-concept study, the usability (knife-to-skin-time) and the general thermal capacity (30 min warm storage at 38 °C ex vivo p p < 0.01) indicating epithelial damage. However, the effect on renal outcomes in not severely pre-damaged kidneys does not appear to be conclusively significant. A close follow-up study is warranted, especially in the context of marginal organs or in cases where anastomosis-times are prolonged due to surgical complexity (e.g., multiple vessels and complex reconstructions).

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