Deceased Donor Procurement Flashcards

1
Q

OPO responsibilities (There are 15 listed!)

A
  1. Identifying potential deceased donors
  2. Providing evidence of authorization for donation
  3. Evaluating deceased donors
  4. Maintaining documentation used to exclude any patient from the imminent neurological death data definition or the eligible data definition
  5. Verifying that death is pronounced according to applicable laws
  6. Establishing and then implementing a plan to address organ donation for diverse cultures and ethnic populations
  7. Ensuring the clinical management of the deceased donor
  8. Ensuring that the necessary tissue-typing material is procured, divided, and packaged
  9. Assessing deceased donor organ quality
  10. Preserving, labeling, packaging, and transporting the organs. Labeling and packaging must be completed using the OPTN organ tracking system according to policy 16.
  11. Executing the match run and using the resulting match for each deceased donor organ allocation ( Does not apply to covered VCA transplants which instead must be allocated by policy 12.2)
  12. Documenting and maintaining complete deceased donor information for 7 years for all organs procured.
  13. Ensuring that all deceased donor information is reported to the OPTN upon receipt to enable complete and accurate evaluation of donor suitability by transplant programs
  14. (Specifies required information of #13) Ensuring documentation is submitted for ABO source documentation, ABO subtype source documentation, infectious disease results source documentation, death pronouncements source documentation, authorization for donation source documentation, and HLA typing source documentation
  15. Maintaining blood specimens appropriate for serologic and nucleic acid testing (NAT) as available for each deceased donor for at least ten years after the date of organ transplant and ensuring their availability for retrospective testing.
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2
Q

Evaluating and screening potential deceased donors

A
  1. Attempt to obtain the deceased donor’s medical and behavioral history from one or more individuals familiar with the donor to screen for medical conditions that may affect the decision to use the donated organ.
  2. Review the deceased donor’s medical record
  3. Complete a physical examination of the deceased donor including the donor’s vital signs
  4. Document in the deceased donor medical record if any of this information is not available and the reason it is not available
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3
Q

Deceased donor medical and behavioral history

A
  1. Any testing and lab results used to identify the presence of transmissible diseases, malignancies, or conditions, treated or untreated that may be transmitted to the recipient
  2. Whether the potential deceased donor has any risk factors associated with disease transmission including bloodborne pathogens (HIV, HBV,HCV)
  3. Whether the potential deceased donor has a history of prior exposure or treatment with human petuitary derived growth hormone (HPDGH) which would implicate an increased risk of prion disease
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4
Q

Deceased donor blood type determination

A

At least two donor blood samples must be submitted, drawn on separate occasions, at different collection times, and submitted as separate samples prior to the match run

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5
Q

Deceased donor blood subtype determination

A

Deceased donor blood samples for subtyping must be tested using pre-red blood cell transfusion samples, be drawn on 2 separate occasions, have different collection times, and be submitted as separate samples.

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6
Q

Reporting of deceased donor blood type and subtype

A
  1. Two different qualified health care professionals must each make an independent report of the donor’s blood type to the optn
  2. If the donor’s subtype is required for allocation 2 qualified healthcare professionals must report the subtype to the OPTN
  3. Both qualified health care professionals must use all known available blood types and subtype determination source documents to verify they contain accurate information
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7
Q

Exceptions to the hiv screening requirement

A

Exceptions to the HIV screening requirement may be made for organs OTHER THAN kidneys when an extreme medical emergency warrants the transplantation of an organ that has not been tested for HIV. In this case:

OPO must provide all available deceased donor medical and social history to the transplant program and treat the deceased donor as having any risk criteria for acute hiv hbv or hcv infection

Receiving hospital must inform the potential transplant recipient or the recipient’s authorized agent before transplantation and obtain HIV screening test results prior to storing sharing or using the extra vessels in another recipient

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8
Q

Required deceased donor general risk assessment (7 evals)

A
  1. arterial blood gas results
  2. Blood type determination and reporting
  3. Chest xray
  4. Complete blood count (CBC)
  5. Electrolytes
  6. serum glucose
  7. Urinalysis within 24 hours before cross clamp
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9
Q

Required deceased donor infectious disease testing (11 specific disease tests)

A

blood and urine cultures, as well as the following tests:
1. HIV antibody test (can be combined with HIV antigen test)
2. HIV RNA test/ diagnostic nucleic acid test
3. HepB surface antigen test
4. HepB core antibody test
5. HepB DNA test
6. HepC antibody test
7. HepC RNA test
8. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) antibody test
9. Epstein-barr antibody test
10. Syphilis screening
11. Toxoplasma immunoglobin G antibody test

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10
Q

Which infectious disease test is required specifically for the lungs?

A

Sars-CoV-2!

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11
Q

Required deceased donor information (13 data points)

A
  1. Age
  2. diagnosis/cause of death
  3. Donor behavioral and social history
  4. Donor management info
  5. donor medical history
  6. Donor evaluation information including all laboratory testing radiologic results and injury to the organ
  7. Ethnicity
  8. Height
  9. Organ anatomy and recovery information
  10. Sex
  11. All vital signs including BP, hr, and temp
  12. Weight
  13. Covid-19 testing status
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12
Q

Required information for deceased kidney donors ( 6 data points)

A
  1. Anatomical description including number of blood vessels, ureters, and approximate length of each
  2. HLA information
  3. Injuries or abnormalities
  4. Perfusion information if performed
  5. Kidney laterality
  6. Biopsy results
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13
Q

Due cause to perform a kidney biopsy (excluding donors under 18 years old):

A
  1. Anuria
  2. Donor has received hemodialysis or other renal replacement therapy during current hospital admission or in the care of donor management
  3. History of diabetes or HbA1C of 6.5 or greater
  4. KDPI greater than 85% at time of match run
  5. Donor age 60+
  6. Donor age 50-59 with history of hypertension, Terminal serum creatinine 1.5+mg/dl, or cause of death was a CVA
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14
Q

Required information for deceased liver donors

A
  1. HLA information
  2. Other lab testing - ALT/AST, alkaline phosphate, total and direct bilirubin, international normalized ration or prothrombin, partial thromboplastin time
  3. Pre-procurement biopsy results if performed
  4. Pre-procurement CT results if performed
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15
Q

Required information for deceased heart donors (5 data points)

A
  1. 12-lead electrocardiogram interpretation if available
  2. Arterial blood gas results and ventilator settings
  3. Cardiology consult if performed
  4. Echocardiogram
  5. HLA information
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16
Q

Required information for deceased lung donors (6 data points)

A
  1. Arterial blood gasses and ventilator settings within 2 hours prior to the offer
  2. Bronchoscopy results if performed
  3. Chest x ray interpreted by a radiologist or qualified physician within three hours prior to the offer
  4. HLA information
    5.Sputum gran stain
  5. Lung laterality
17
Q

Required information for deceased pancreas donors (6 data points)

A
  1. Family history of diabetes.
  2. Hemoglobin A1C if performed
  3. HLA information
  4. Insulin protocol
  5. Serum amylase
  6. Serum lipase
18
Q

Who may not participate in the recovery or transplantation of organs due to a conflict of interest?

A

The potential deceased donor’s attending physician at time of death, and the physician who declares the time of death

19
Q

Organ procurement procedures (7 procedures)

A
  1. Ensure that the deceased donor receives medications at appropriate times.
  2. Document any medications administered in the deceased donor’s record
  3. Begin tissue typing and cross matching as soon as possible.
  4. Use standard surgical techniques in a sterile environment
  5. Maintain flush solutions, additives, and preservation media at appropriate temperatures
  6. Document flush solutions and additives with lot numbers, along with organ anatomy, organ flush characteristics, flush solution amount, and flush solution type in the deceased donor record
  7. Document any organ abnormalities and surgical damage for all organs except extra vessels