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Kidney, Pancreas & Intestinal Transplantation

Kidney, Pancreas & Intestinal Transplantation. Mr James Gilbert Consultant Transplant & Vascular Access Surgeon. A Lot to squeeze in!. Kidney Transplantation. Figure 2.2. Growth in prevalent patients by treatment modality at the end of each year 1997–2012. 54,824 adults on dialysis in UK

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Kidney, Pancreas & Intestinal Transplantation

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  1. Kidney, Pancreas & Intestinal Transplantation Mr James Gilbert Consultant Transplant & Vascular Access Surgeon

  2. A Lot to squeeze in!

  3. Kidney Transplantation

  4. Figure 2.2. Growth in prevalent patients by treatment modality at the end of each year 1997–2012 • 54,824 adults on dialysis in UK • Represents 108 per million population (pmp) • 6891 new starters in 2012 • Continues to rise year on year

  5. But dialysis is not great long term:

  6. Transplant is a ‘treatment option’ • Ultimate form of RRT • Improves quality and quantity of life • Allows normal diet and fluid intake • Progressive reversal of anaemia & bone disease • All patients with ESRF should be considered • Not necessarily for everyone • There is an alternative (HD, PD, Conservative) • Transplants don’t last forever

  7. Kidney Transplant Rates

  8. Living Transplant Rates

  9. Life enhancing or life saving? • Doubles life expectancy (20 years vs. 10 years overall) • Cost of transplant = 1 year dialysis costs!

  10. Pancreas Transplantation

  11. The insulin-dependent diabetic is: • 25 times more prone to blindness • 17 times more prone to kidney disease • 5 times more often afflicted with gangrene • Twice as often afflicted with heart disease Has a life expectancy 1/3 less than that of the general population

  12. Pancreas Transplantation: • Only treatment that reliably offers type 1 diabetics: • Insulin independence • Normal glucose metabolism • Normal Diet • Ameliorate secondary complications DM • Improved quality and quantity of life • Now associated with improved outcomes • Viewed more enthusiastically rather than sceptically

  13. UK pancreas and islet activity

  14. Pancreas Donors by type

  15. 2013 Pancreas & islet Tx by donor type & centre

  16. Any pancreas program should: • Have overall low morbidity & mortality • Eliminate need for insulin and BM monitoring • Eliminate hypoglycaemic events • Create a euglycaemic state with pre and postprandial sugars comparable to non diabetics • Achieve HbA1c levels comparable to those in non diabetics

  17. Best results achieved when: • Have a ‘perfect’ donor • Young, slim DBD Donor • Have a ‘perfect’ recipient • Pre-dialysis and slim • ‘Perfect’ retrieval and short cold ischaemic time • No complications • Ideals rarely possible but must strive for ‘perfection’ due to sensitive nature of the pancreas • Hence fussy pancreas transplant surgeons

  18. Donor considerations • Age: <55 (DBD) <50 (DCD) • Girth < 90cm / BMI < 27 • ‘Good health’ history • Minimal ‘down time’ • Minimal fatty infiltration or fibrosis of parenchyma • Short cold ischaemic time

  19. Pancreas donor age

  20. Pancreas donor BMI

  21. Surgical options • Simultaneous Pancreas & Kidney (SPK) • Pancreas after Kidney (PAK) • Pancreas Alone (PAT) • (Islets) – Radiological guided infusion into portal system

  22. Indications

  23. SPK Transplant Exocrine drainage to proximal SB Portal vein onto IVC Y-Graft onto distal aorta / RCIA Kidney onto left iliac vessels

  24. PAK / PA Transplant • Recent move to bladder drainage (2011) • Consequence of inferior outcomes c/w SPK • 70% 1 yr survival 2010/11 • Use urinary amylase as a measure of function • Higher morbidity for the patient but ? Better graft survival (time will tell)

  25. Common peri-operative problems • Bleeding • Thrombosis • Graft Pancreatitis • Delayed Graft Function • Prolonged ileus / exacerbation gastroparesis • Need for TPN • Sepsis • Peri-pancreatic collections • Pancreatic leaks

  26. Graft Pancreatitis • Appears during the first few days and common • Usually self limiting • Pain and tenderness at the graft site • Associated peri-pancreatic oedema / collection • High drain amylase • Usually result of: • Ischaemic reperfusion injury • More common in marginal organ, DCD & larger recipient • Handling • Infection

  27. Oxford Pancreas Programme Activity & Outcome Data April 2011 – Mar 2013

  28. Transplant type and Donor type

  29. Transplant Outcomes (1 Year) 3 deaths in first 30 days: 1 with ARDS, 2 Cardiac Arrest.

  30. Mortality Comparison 2 times more likely to die each year on waiting list than in first year after transplant

  31. SPK outcomes 2007 – 2012 (DBD)

  32. Isolated Pancreas outcomes 2007 – 2012 (DBD)

  33. Pancreas Outcomes 2007 – 2012 (DCD)

  34. Cause of graft loss 2007 - 2012

  35. Intestinal Transplantation

  36. Intestinal Transplantation - Types Isolated Small Bowel Multivisceral Whole Liver & Small Bowel Modified Multivisceral

  37. Indications Presence of irreversible intestinal failure with Impaired venous access for TPN (reduced to the last two suitable veins for placement of the feeding catheter) Progressive fibrotic liver disease (usually from TPN) Life threatening episodes of catheter related sepsis Broadly two situations that lead to intestinal failure: Short gut syndrome (less than 40 cm in length) Non functioning bowel

  38. Multivisceral Isolated Small Bowel

  39. Liver & Small Bowel

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