Abstract Background There remains a lack of consensus on the optimal storage method for deceased donor kidneys. This meta‐analysis compares storage with hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) vs traditional static cold storage (SCS). Methods The Cochrane Kidney and Transplant Specialised Register was searched to identify (quasi‐) randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to include in our meta‐analysis. PRISMA guidelines were used to perform and write this review. Results There is high‐certainty evidence that HMP reduces the risk of delayed graft function (DGF) when compared to SCS (2138 participants from 14 studies, RR = 0.77; 0.67‐0.90, P = .0006). This benefit is significant in both donation following circulatory death (DCD; 772 patients from seven studies, RR = 0.75; 0.64‐0.87, P = .0002) and donation following brainstem death (DBD) grafts (971 patients from four studies, RR = 0.78; 0.65‐0.93, P = .006). The number of perfusions required to prevent one episode of DGF was 7.26 and 13.60 in DCD and DBD grafts, respectively. There is strong evidence that HMP also improves graft survival in both DBD and DCD grafts, at both 1 and 3 years. Economic analyses suggest HMP is cost‐saving at 1 year compared with SCS. Conclusion Hypothermic machine perfusion is superior to SCS in deceased donor renal transplantation. Direct comparisons with normothermic machine perfusion in RCTs are essential to identify optimal preservation methods in kidney transplantation.
In many transplant centers, a recipient body mass index (BMI) >30 kg/m2 would be considered a contraindication for pancreas transplantation. This study aims to investigate the impact of recipient BMI on graft outcomes after pancreas transplantation.Retrospective data on all UK solid organ pancreas transplants from 1994 to 2016 were obtained from the National Health Service Blood and Transplant UK Transplant Registry, n = 2618. Cases missing BMI data were excluded, resulting in a final cohort of n = 1452. Graft and patient survival analysis were conducted using Kaplan-Meier plots and Cox regression models.The mean recipient BMI was 24.8 kg/m2 (±2.4). There were 507 overweight (BMI 25-29.9) and 146 obese (>30) recipients receiving pancreas transplants. Univariate analysis showed no statistically significant difference between overweight BMI categories compared with normal BMI (18.5-24.9 kg/m2). Multivariate analysis revealed increasing recipient BMI had a significant impact on graft survival (P = 0.03, hazard ratio 1.04, 95% confidence interval, 1.00-1.08). Receiver operating characteristic curve analyses revealed no value of BMI that provided both specific and sensitive discrimination between death and survival of both grafts or patients. Recipients on dialysis with a BMI >30 kg/m2 had a statistically significant decrease in both graft (P = 0.002) and patient survival (P = 0.015).Analysis of available UK Pancreas data has shown recipient BMI is an independent risk factor for patient survival after transplantation. However, we have been unable to define a specific cutoff value above which patients have poorer outcomes. Obese patients on hemodialysis had the poorest graft survival, and preemptive transplantation may be beneficial in this cohort.
Introduction Use of mobile devices with high-quality cameras has expanded medical photography. We investigate the impact of different devices and conditions on photograph quality in a surgical setting.
The cause, management and outcome of 23 patients with a pancreatic fistula following acute pancreatitis are reviewed. Nineteen patients developed an external fistula following necrosectomy or drainage of a pancreatic abscess or pseudocyst; four of these patients died. In the 15 survivors spontaneous closure occurred in 11 cases with low output fistulae; operative intervention was needed in the four cases with high output fistulae. Four patients with internal fistulae had not undergone previous surgery; two of them had a pancreaticopleural fistula with associated pancreaticogastric fistulae, while two had pancreatic ascites. All four of these patients required surgical intervention and one died.
This is a protocol for a Cochrane Review (Intervention). The objectives are as follows: This review aims to look at the benefits and harms of open donor nephrectomy versus laparoscopic donor nephrectomy as appropriate surgical techniques for live kidney donors.
Ionic liquids are a diverse range of charged chemicals with low volatility and often liquids at ambient temperatures. This characteristic has in part lead to them being considered environmentally-friendly replacements for existing volatile solvents. However, methylimidazolium ionic liquids are slow to break down in the environment and a recent study at Newcastle detected 1 octyl 3 methylimidazolium (M8OI) – an 8 carbon variant methylimidazolium ionic liquid - in soils in close proximity to a landfill site. The current M8OI toxicity database in cultured mammalian cells, in experimental animal studies and in model indicators of environmental impact are reviewed. Selected analytical data from the Newcastle study suggest the soils in close proximity to the landfill site, an urban soil lacking overt contamination, had variable levels of M8OI. The potential for M8OI - or a structurally related ionic liquid – to trigger primary biliary cholangitis (PBC), an autoimmune liver disease thought to be triggered by an unknown agent(s) in the environment, is reviewed.
Abstract Artificial intelligence tools, particularly convolutional neural networks (CNNs), are transforming healthcare by enhancing predictive, diagnostic, and decision-making capabilities. This review provides an accessible and practical explanation of CNNs for clinicians and highlights their relevance in medical image analysis. CNNs have shown themselves to be exceptionally useful in computer vision, a field that enables machines to ‘see’ and interpret visual data. Understanding how these models work can help clinicians leverage their full potential, especially as artificial intelligence continues to evolve and integrate into healthcare. CNNs have already demonstrated their efficacy in diverse medical fields, including radiology, histopathology, and medical photography. In radiology, CNNs have been used to automate the assessment of conditions such as pneumonia, pulmonary embolism, and rectal cancer. In histopathology, CNNs have been used to assess and classify colorectal polyps, gastric epithelial tumours, as well as assist in the assessment of multiple malignancies. In medical photography, CNNs have been used to assess retinal diseases and skin conditions, and to detect gastric and colorectal polyps during endoscopic procedures. In surgical laparoscopy, they may provide intraoperative assistance to surgeons, helping interpret surgical anatomy and demonstrate safe dissection zones. The integration of CNNs into medical image analysis promises to enhance diagnostic accuracy, streamline workflow efficiency, and expand access to expert-level image analysis, contributing to the ultimate goal of delivering further improvements in patient and healthcare outcomes.
Abstract Background Several novel machine perfusion technologies have been developed which aim to improve kidney transplant outcomes compared with ice-box static cold storage (SCS). These machine perfusion technologies can be applied “continuous” from donor centre, or only at the recipient centre (“end-ischaemic”). We aimed to compare machine perfusion technologies with each other and with SCS. Methods We searched the Cochrane Kidney and Transplant Register of Studies to 20 June 2023. Two independent authors screened articles and extracted data. Pairwise random-effects meta-analysis was performed, with additional indirect comparisons performed. Main results 22 studies (4007 participants) were included. “Continuous” non-oxygenated hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) versus SCS improves graft-survival (follow-up=1-10 years, HR=0.55, 95% confidence interval=0.40-0.77, P=0.0005, GRADE: high-certainty evidence), reduces delayed graft function (RR 0.78, 0.64-0.96, P=0.02; high-certainty evidence) and is cost-saving. Beneficial effects persist when cold ischaemic times were short, but were only seen when HMP was “continuous”; End-ischaemic oxygenated HMP (median 4.6hours) does not improve outcomes. Addition of oxygen to continuous HMP further improves graft-survival in DCD donors. End-ischaemic normothermic machine perfusion (NMP) does not improve outcomes versus SCS; indirect comparison revealed that continuous non-oxygenated HMP was associated with improved graft survival compared with end-ischaemic NMP (HR=0.31, 0.11-0.92, P=0.03). Conclusions Continuous HMP (initiated in donor hospital) is superior to SCS in deceased-donor kidney transplantation. Timing of HMP is important, and benefits have not been demonstrated with end-ischaemic HMP. Whilst end-ischaemic NMP is inferior to continuous HMP on indirect comparisons, further studies assessing NMP for viability assessment and therapeutic delivery are in progress.