谷歌浏览器插件
订阅小程序
在清言上使用

Paediatric Organ Donation Following Neurological Determinants of Death in Intensive Care Units in Saudi Arabia: a Retrospective Cross-Sectional Study.

Yasser Mohammed Kazzaz,Fidaa Maghrabi,Raghad Ali Alkhathaami, Rahaf Fahad Alghannam, Nora Mohammad Alonazi,Alanood Abdullah Alrubaiaan, Nayla Anwar Alkadeeb,Mohannad Antar, Razan Babakr

BMJ open(2023)

引用 0|浏览8
暂无评分
摘要
OBJECTIVES:The aim of this retrospective cross-sectional study was to assess the performance of paediatric organ donation in intensive care units following neurological determinants of death in Saudi Arabia.DESIGN:Retrospective cross-sectional study.SETTING:Paediatric intensive care units at three tertiary centres over 5 years.PARTICIPANTS:423 paediatric deaths (<14 years) from January 2017 to December 2021.PRIMARY OUTCOME:Patients were identified as either possible, potential, eligible, approached, consented or actual donors based on organ donation definitions from the WHO, Transplantation Society and UK potential donor audit.SECONDARY OUTCOME:Secondary outcome was causative mechanisms of brain injury in possible donors. Demographics of the study cohort (age, sex, hospital length of stay (LOS), paediatric intensive care unit LOS, pre-existing comorbidities, admission type and diagnosis category) were compared between possible and non-possible donors. Demographics were also compared between patients who underwent neurological determination of death and patients who did not.RESULTS:Among the 423 paediatric deaths, 125 (29.6%) were identified as possible donors by neurological criteria (devastating brain insult with likelihood of brain death, Glasgow Coma Score of 3 and ≥2 absent brainstem reflexes). Of them, 41 (32.8%) patients were identified as potential donors (neurological determination of death examinations initiated by the treating team), while only two became actual donors. The eligible death conversion rate was 6.9%. The reporting rate to organ procurement organisation was 70.7% with a consent rate of 8.3%. The most common causes of brain insult causing death were cardiac arrest (44 of 125 patients, 35.2%), followed by traumatic brain injury and drowning (31 of 125 patients, 24.8%), and intracranial bleeding (13 of 125 patients, 11.4%).CONCLUSION:Major contributors to low actual donation rate were consent, donor identification and donor referral.
更多
查看译文
关键词
epidemiologic studies,paediatric intensive & critical care,transplant medicine
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要