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Development of a normothermic extracorporeal liver perfusion system toward improving viability and function of human extended criteria donor livers.

Liver Transpl · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers tested a system called normothermic extracorporeal liver perfusion (NELP) on seven human livers that were rejected for transplant. Over 8 hours, the system maintained normal temperature, blood sugar, and other key functions while improving oxygen use and reducing signs of liver damage. Two of the livers treated with a special solution showed a 10% reduction in fat buildup. The study found that NELP preserved liver structure and function without causing additional harm, suggesting it could help make more donor livers available for transplant.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalLiver Transpl, 2016
Citations72
Relative citation ratio3.18
NIH percentile85
Molecules

Abstract

Donor organ shortages have led to an increased interest in finding new approaches to recover organs from extended criteria donors (ECD). Normothermic extracorporeal liver perfusion (NELP) has been proposed as a superior preservation method to reduce ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI), precondition suboptimal grafts, and treat ECD livers so that they can be successfully used for transplantation. The aim of this study was to investigate the beneficial effects of a modified NELP circuit on discarded human livers. Seven human livers that were rejected for transplantation were placed on a modified NELP circuit for 8 hours. Perfusate samples and needle core biopsies were obtained at hourly intervals. A defatting solution that contained exendin-4 (50 nM) and L-carnitine (10 mM) was added to the perfusate for 2 steatotic livers. NELP provided normal temperature, electrolytes, and pH and glucose levels in the perfusate along with physiological vascular flows and pressures. Functional, biochemical, and microscopic evaluation revealed no additional injuries to the grafts during NELP with an improved oxygen extraction ratio (>0.5) and stabilized markers of hepatic injury. All livers synthesized adequate amounts of bile and coagulation factors. We also demonstrated a mild reduction (10%) of macroglobular steatosis with the use of the defatting solution. Histology demonstrated normal parenchymal architecture and a minimal to complete lack of IRI at the end of NELP. In conclusion, a modified NELP circuit preserved hepatocyte architecture, recovered synthetic functions, and hepatobiliary parameters of ECD livers without additional injuries to the grafts. This approach has the potential to increase the donor pool for clinical transplantation. Liver Transplantation 22 979-993 2016 AASLD.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27027254 ↗