Ex vivo normothermic preservation of a kidney graft from uncontrolled donation after circulatory death over 73 hours

Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2024 Jan 12:11:1330043. doi: 10.3389/fbioe.2023.1330043. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

The transplant community is focused on prolonging the ex vivo preservation time of kidney grafts to allow for long-distance kidney graft transportation, assess the viability of marginal grafts, and optimize a platform for the translation of innovative therapeutics to clinical practice, especially those focused on cell and vector delivery to organ conditioning and reprogramming. We describe the first case of feasible preservation of a kidney from a donor after uncontrolled circulatory death over a 73-h period using normothermic perfusion and analyze hemodynamic, biochemical, histological, and transcriptomic parameters for inflammation and kidney injury. The mean pressure and flow values were 71.24 ± 9.62 mmHg and 99.65 ± 18.54 mL/min, respectively. The temperature range was 36.7°C-37.2°C. The renal resistance index was 0.75 ± 0.15 mmHg/mL/min. The mean pH was 7.29 ± 0.15. The lactate concentration peak increased until 213 mg/dL at 6 h, reaching normal values after 34 h of perfusion (8.92 mg/dL). The total urine output at the end of perfusion was 1.185 mL. Histological analysis revealed no significant increase in acute tubular necrosis (ATN) severity as perfusion progressed. The expression of KIM-1, VEGF, and TGFβ decreased after 6-18 h of perfusion until 60 h in which the expression of these genes increased again together with the expression of β-catenin, Ki67, and TIMP1. We show that normothermic perfusion can maintain a kidney graft viable ex vivo for 3 days, thus allowing a rapid translation of pre-clinical therapeutics to clinical practice.

Keywords: kidney preservation; kidney transplantation; normothermic perfusion; regenerative medicine; uncontrolled donation.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This study has been funded by Project “RD21/0005/0003”, funded by the Carlos III Health Institute and the “NextGenerationEU European Union/Mechanism for Recovery and Resilience (MRR)/Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan (PRTR)” and by Instituto de Salud Carlos III through the project “PI21/00205” (Co-funded by European Regional Development Fund “A way to make Europe”).