For Health Care Providers
The International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation Scientific Statement on Organ Donation After Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: Scope of Work Proposal for Public Comments
The International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) has commissioned a scientific statement pertaining to organ donation after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The purpose of this post on ILCOR.org is to reach out to the broader community for comments on the scope of the review. Some of the sections below are very technical. We have provided a plain English version at the end of this document, but resuscitation or transplant specialists in your country can explain them as well if you need help.
Lay Summary
It is unclear how many victims who die after initial resuscitation from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest have wishes consistent with, and are eligible to provide organs or tissues for donation. This is important because potentially 8 individuals waiting for transplantation can be helped by a single donor. If we can optimize the organ donation process for our communities we may see a dramatic improvement in survival and quality of life or wellness index within our communities. There are lots of barriers to helping physicians and families make decisions about organ donation after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and this summary could contribute to helping to break down these barriers. There are countries (e.g. Spain and the Netherlands) that are achieving high rates of organ donation that may be using strategies that others can learn from. There are countries such as South Africa where organ donation after cardiac death has not been implemented and where the potential for transplant is lost.
Scope of work of the proposed scientific statement for clinicians and scientists
Definitions:
Two main categories of organ donation pathways Circulatory death (DCD) and Donor after Neurological Determination of Death (DNDD). The DCD category includes the modified Maastricht Classification of DCD sub-categories IA, IIA, III, IV
- Category I- Uncontrolled IA out of hospital CA- Found Dead
- Category II - Uncontrolled IIA out of hospital CA - Witnessed Cardiac arrest
- Category III - Controlled - Withdrawal of Life Sustaining Therapy
- Category IV - Uncontrolled controlled - sudden Cardiac arrest during or after the process of brain death determination and prior to organ procurement
1.0 Introduction
Look at how OHCA patients who do not survive can become organ donors after circulatory death (DCD) or after Neurological Determination of Death (DNDD).
Donation after circulatory death (DCD) can occur in a number of situations
- Category I- Uncontrolled IA out of hospital CA- Found Dead
- Category II - Uncontrolled IIA out of hospital CA - Witnessed Cardiac arrest
- Category III - Controlled - Withdrawal of Life Sustaining Therapy
- Category IV - Uncontrolled controlled - sudden Cardiac arrest during or after the process of brain death determination and prior to organ procurement
2.0 Background
2.1 The incidence and outcomes (e.g. number of organs transplanted, graft survival, recipient outcomes) of organ donation after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in the world literature. Report as per both categories DCD (uDCD=uncontrolled as a subcategory) and DNDD
2.2 The estimation of potential donors after OHCA for DCD (uDCD=uncontrolled as a subcategory) and DNDD based on published registry data.
3.0 Strategies to close the gap between incidence of donation and potential donation
3.1 Strategies published in the literatures that are associated with increased rates of organ donation among patients after OHCA
3.2 Strategies published in the literature associated with improved organ viability and organ transplantation success rates after OHCA (e.g. organ preservation and optimization after OHCA)
3.3 Special Case Extracorporeal CPR (ECPR)
- 3.3.1 Published decision rules to guide end-of-life care in patients treated with ECPR after OHCA so that potential organ donors can be identified in this
- 3.3.2 Published guidelines for when to terminate ECPR and consider organ donation
- 3.3.3 Identify the knowledge gap and the need for a decision rule to guide when ECPR should be ceased and organ donation considered
3.4 Criteria (When) for transitioning from active resuscitation to organ preservation in patients with OHCA - Look for guidelines and decision rules that address this
3.5 Process (How) for transitioning from active resuscitation to organ preservation in patients with OHCA - look for implementation strategies
4.0 Ethical considerations around uDCD after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
4.1 Describe the ethical issues that arise at the transition between the resuscitation clinical teams and organ procurement teams and address or identify the international variability
4.2 Describe the patient and family perspective, including issues of consent, when transitioning from active resuscitation to organ preservation in patients with unsuccessful resuscitation of out of hospital cardiac arrest
4.3 Do you think there is a problem deciding when to change from trying to resuscitate a person to preserving their organs for transplantation?
5.0 Cost effectiveness of donation after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
5.1 DCD and DNDD post ROSC (no eCPR)
5.2 DCD and DNDD with ongoing eCPR
5.3 uDCD with ongoing CPR/eCPR without ROSC
Deliverable:
A narrative review and consensus across international experts from multiple disciplines, that will summarize key published data on important issues related to organ donation after OHCA. The review will provide guidance and support the development of treatment recommendations and identify strategies to optimize rates of ethical organ procurement and successful organ transplantation after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. We will identify knowledge gaps and priorities for research.
To ensure the review includes the patient, family and community perspective we will use www.ilcor.org to iteratively engage relevant sectors of the global public to provide input and shape the final product. We thank you for taking the time to review and comment on this scope of work proposal.
The Authors:
The approved writing group consists of scientists representing allied health professionals and physicians from across the world. The authors have been reviewed and approved based on the conflict of interest policy.