Can TA-NRP Increase the Number of Patients Receiving Lung Transplants?

Published 12 April 2024
  • Advanced Lung Failure & Transplantation
  • Annual Meeting
  • Cardiothoracic Surgery
  • ISHLT2024
  • Press Release

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12 April, 2024, Prague, Czech Republic—Re-perfusing the lungs of an organ donor after the heart has irreversibly stopped beating with a technique called normothermic regional perfusion (TA-NRP) could potentially increase the number of patients receiving lung transplants, according to researchers at the Annual Meeting and Scientific Sessions of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT) in Prague.

TA-NRP uses a machine to pass blood through a donor’s abdomen and chest after the heart has irreversibly stopped beating (called donation after circulatory death, or DCD). Thirty to forty minutes of perfusing blood to these areas reanimates the heart and ventilates the lungs.

Headshot of Pedro Catarino
Pedro Catarino, MD

Pedro Catarino, MD, director of Aortic Surgery at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, said techniques like TA-NRP will help get more of the available donor lungs to patients on the waiting list. Worldwide, the overall utilization of available donor lungs is only 20 percent.

“The utilization of donor lungs is generally quite poor,” said Dr. Catarino. “For every five organ donors, we only use one set of lungs. It’s even worse for DCD donors, only four to six percent in the US. The great majority of DCD donors are not giving their lungs.”

Dr. Catarino presented data showing that the retrieval rate for DCD lungs has increased to about 15 percent with the utilization of TA-NRP. However, some lung experts harbor concerns that lungs are injured during the in situ perfusion process.

Headshot of Shaf Keshavjee
Shaf Keshavjee, MD, MSc, FRCSC, FACS
“TA-NRP is technically possible, and some surgeons have successfully used it to retrieve both the heart and lungs from DCD donors,” said Shaf Keshavjee, MD, MSc, FRCSC, FACS, director of the Toronto Lung Transplant Program. “However, when TA-NRP was introduced in the US, the incidence of lung retrieval decreased.

 

“I think NRP could save more hearts, kidneys, livers, and lungs,” said Dr. Keshavjee. “But we need to standardize our technique because there are too many examples of good donor lungs damaged by TA-NRP.”

TA-NRP is currently only being used in the US and Spain. In Canada, DCD donor lungs are removed from the body and perfused outside the body (ex vivo) in a machine. Machine perfusion, which gives the surgical team control over the fluids used to perfuse the lungs, has been highly successful for the Toronto Lung Transplant Program.

“We have the largest lung transplant program in the world,” said Dr. Keshavjee. “We use 40 percent of DCD lungs, whereas the US uses only four percent.”

Unlike machine perfusion, which is not readily available worldwide, Dr. Catarino said that TA-NRP is a technique that anyone can use.

“Using TA-NRP, we’re also to measure the oxygen transfer in the lungs, which is a very good indicator of the quality of the donor’s lungs,” he said. “Being able to perform this functional assessment is one of its great benefits.”

Dr. Catarino said there is data that suggests outcomes following TA-NRP for DCD lungs are very good.

“TA-NRP is a way to get more lungs to patients who need them,” he said. “DCD was 32 percent of overall organ donors in the US in 2022, and the trajectory is going upward.”

The ISHLT has launched a task force to produce a statement that summarizes the best available evidence and practice for NRP, including outlining issues, concerns, and areas for future research.

Shaf Keshavjee, MD, MSc, FRCSC, FACS serves as Chief Medical Officer of Traferox Technologies, receives personal fees from Lung Bioengineering and Traferox Technologies, and is an inventor of IP licensed to Traferox Technologies. He also serves as a consultant for United Therapeutics, CSL Behring, and Abbott. The author fully adheres to policies at UHN that ensure academic integrity and management of potential conflicts of interest.

About ISHLT
The International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation is a not-for-profit, multidisciplinary professional organization dedicated to improving the care of patients with advanced heart or lung disease through transplantation, mechanical support and innovative therapies. With members in more than 45 countries, ISHLT is the world’s largest organization dedicated to the research, education and advocacy of end-stage heart and lung disease. ISHLT members represent more than 15 different professional disciplines. For more information, visit www.ishlt.org.

The ISHLT Annual Meeting and Scientific Sessions will be held 10-13 April at the Prague Congress Centre in Prague, Czech Republic.

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