Objectives: Kidney transplant recipients are at high-risk for donor-derived infections in the early posttransplant period. Transplant preservation fluid (PF) samples are collected for microbiological analysis. In case of positive PF cultures, the risk for the recipient is unknown and there is no consensus for prescribing prophylactic antibiotics. This nationwide observational study aimed to determine the epidemiology of bacterial and fungal agents in kidney transplant PF cultures and identify risk factors associated with positive PF cultures. Methods: We performed a retrospective observational study on the following data collected from a national database between October 2015 and December 2016: characteristics of donor, recipient, transplantation, infection in donor and PF microbiological data. Results: Of 4487 kidney transplant procedures, including 725 (16.2%, 725/4487) from living donors, 20.5% had positive PF cultures (living donors: 1.8%, 13/725; deceased donors: 24.1%, 907/3762). Polymicrobial contamination was found in 59.9% (485/810) of positive PF cultures. Coagulase-negative staphylococci (65.8%, 533/810) and Enterobacteriaceae (28.0%, 227/810) were the most common microorganisms. Factors associated with an increased risk of positive PF cultures in multivariable analysis were (for deceased-donor kidney transplants): intestinal perforation during procurement (OR 4.4, 95% CI 2.1 e9.1), multiorgan procurement (OR 1.4, 95% CI 1.1e1.7) and en bloc transplantation (OR 2.5, 95% CI 1.3 e4.9). Use of perfusion pump and donor antibiotic therapy were associated with a lower risk of positive PF cultures (OR 0.4, 95% CI 0.3e0.5 and OR 0.6, 95% CI 0.5e0.7, respectively).
Conclusion:In conclusion, 24% of deceased-donor PF cultures were positive, and PF contamination during procurement seemed to be the major cause.
SummaryThere are no established predictive factors to identify patients at the acute phase of severe stroke with a high probability of presenting brain death (BD). We retrospectively collected clinical and paraclinical data of consecutive patients at the acute phase of severe stroke with a potential progression to BD through the hospital organ procurement and transplant coordination system in five centres in Lorrain (France) between 1 January 2012 and 31 December 2013. Final endpoint was adjudicated BD. Of 400 included patients, 91 (23%) presented adjudicated BD. Initial Glasgow Coma Scale score ≤6 (P = 0.008), herniation (P = 0.009), hydrocephalus (P = 0.019), initial systolic blood pressure >150 mmHg (P = 0.002), past history of alcohol abuse (P = 0.019) and stroke volume >65 ml (P = 0.040) were significantly associated with BD progression. Two prognostic scores for stroke with unquantifiable or quantifiable volume were built according to the number of risk factors presented. Following internal validation, the respective bias-corrected predictive performance (c-index) of the two scores was 72% (95% confidence interval: 67-78%) and 77% (95% confidence interval: 72-82%). These scores could form the basis of a simple tool of six criteria to help physicians make the difficult decision of intensive care unit management to preserve organs in potential donors.
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