Chapter 86 Organ Donation
1 Who governs the rules and regulations for organ donation?
The Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN) is a system for operating and monitoring the unbiased allocation, through established medical criteria, of organs donated for transplantation and maintaining a recipients’ waiting list (including the listing and delisting of recipients).
The United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) is a nonprofit organization awarded the contract by the Department of Health and Human Services in 1986 to implement the OPTN.
Organ Procurement Organizations (OPO) serve specific regions in the country for clinical services including working with hospital staff to maintain donor-organ function, working with UNOS to match donor organs with recipients, coordinating organ recovery surgery, and giving compassionate and professional support to donors’ families.
4 What is the current standard for organ donation?
Organ donation is possible in patients who are declared brain dead. New brain death guidelines have been published (see Box 86-1). Despite efforts to promote organ donation, an enormous shortage of available organs for transplant continues to exist. As a result, efforts have been undertaken to expand the settings in which organs may become available (i.e., donation after cardiac death (DCD); see later). See Boxes 86-2, 86-3, and 86-4 and Tables 86-1 and 86-2.
Box 86-1 Brain death criteria
Core body temperature (≥ 32° C)
Absence of cerebral motor responses to pain in all extremities
Absence of brainstem reflexes, that is, pupillary, oculocephalic (doll’s eyes), vestibuloocular (cold calorics), corneal, gag, and cough reflexes
Apnea test (see Boxes 86–2, 86–3, and 86–4)
Exclusion of conditions that may confound clinical assessment of brain death, that is, metabolic or endocrine abnormality or drug intoxication
Electroencephalography | No electrical activity for a period of 30 minutes |
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Cerebral angiography | No intracerebral filling at the level of the carotid bifurcation or circle of Willis Patent external carotid circulation |
Transcranial Doppler sonography | No diastolic or reverberating flow Systolic-only or retrograde diastolic flow Small systolic peaks in early systole |
Somatosensory evoked potential | Bilateral absence of response to medial nerve stimulation |
Cerebral scintigraphy (technetium Tc 99m brain scan) | No uptake of radionuclide in brain parenchyma (hollow skull phenomenon) |
Magnetic resonance imaging | Not yet determined |
Donation after brain death | Donation after cardiac death | |
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Cause of illness (e.g., anoxic, trauma, stroke) | Severe irreversible brain injury Does meet criteria of brain death | Severe irreversible brain injury Does not meet criteria of brain death |
Organ procurement process | Physician (non–transplant team) declares brain death | Family elects withdrawal of life support |
Referral to OPO | Referral to OPO | |
Await OR time for organ procurement | Withdrawal of life support in the OR or ICU | |
Transplant team retrieves organs | Physician (non–transplant team) declares cardiac death | |
Heart, lungs, kidneys, liver, pancreas, and/or intestines are transplantable | Transplant team waits 5 minutes after cardiac death is declared before procuring organs | |
Transplant team retrieves organs | ||
Kidney, pancreas, and liver are generally transplantable |
OR, Operating room.
Modified from Organ Donation After Cardiac Death. Madison, Wis., University of Wisconsin Organ Procurement Organization, 2009.
Box 86-2 Prerequisites for performing the apnea test
Core body temperature ≥ 36.5° C
Systolic blood pressure ≥ 90 mm Hg (may use intravenous fluids or dopamine to achieve)
Eucapnia (PaCO2 approximately 40 mm Hg) if possible
Normoxemia (PaO2 ≥ 200 mm Hg) if possible (typically 10 minutes at an FiO2 of 1.0 will achieve)