Title: Pediatric Donation After Cardiac Death: The PICU Perspective
1Pediatric Donation After Cardiac Death The PICU
Perspective
- Patty Schriver, RN, BSN, CCRN, CHOC
- Marilyn Begin, CST, Surgical Recovery
Coordinator, OneLegacy
2Question
- What does your Donation after Cardiac Death
program look like in your hospital?
3 History of Donation after Cardiac Death
- Prior to the acceptance of the brain death
criteria in the mid-1970s, all organ donations
were performed after cessation of cardiopulmonary
function (DCD). - In 1999, 68 Donation After Cardiac Death (DCD)
cases were accomplished across the United States. - In 2006, 559 DCD cases were accomplished
4Number of DCD DonorsJan 2000-Oct 2006
(Nationally)
- 2000 118
- 2001 169
- 2002 189
- 2003 269
- 2004 391
- 2005 560
- 2006 559
- TOTAL 2255
5Definition
- The surgical recovery of organs that occurs
after the cessation of cardiopulmonary function
6Re-Invention of a Forgotten Procedure
- DCD practice abandoned with acceptance of
Harvard Brain Death Criteria - Brain Dead donors allow for a higher donor yield
- So why go back to the future?
Heart , Lungs, Liver, Pancreas, Kidneys, Small
Bowel
7Institute of Medicine Conclusions
- The recovery of organs from DCD donors
- is an important, medically effective and
- ethically acceptable approach to reducing
- the gap between the demand for and the
- available supply of organs for
- transplantation.
- Institute of Medicine. National Academy of
Sciences, 2006
8Donation after Cardiac Death vs. Brain Death
- Hospital remains in charge of patient care
- Hospital Physician to order comfort care
medications to be given for withdrawal of
life-sustaining measures - Preliminary Release for donation (from coroner)
needs to be given BEFORE death
9Suitable Candidates for DCD
- Meets one of the following
- Non recoverable, Irreversible Brain injury
- End stage musculoskeletal or pulmonary disease
- High spinal cord injury
- Ventilator dependent
- Family has made patient DNR or plans to withdraw
all hemodynamic ventilator support, must be
documented in patient chart - Family inquired or initiated discussion about
organ donation
10Consent/Approval
- No donor related medications or procedures can be
performed without consent. - Clearance from medical examiner/coroner must be
obtained when applicable. - There should be a plan if death does not occur
within the 60 minute timeframe, including
immediate notification of the family. - The legal next of kin shall also include the
patient, a designated health care representative,
legal next of kin, or appropriate surrogate.
11Organ Recovery
- Policy
- Following the declaration of death by the
hospital patient care team, the organ recovery
may be initiated. - UNOS
- Current Practice
- Organ recovery begins after 5 minutes of
asystole.
12Important Points to Remember
- The family will make the decision to withdraw
life sustaining measures independent of the
decision to donate organs. - This procedure should not be viewed as a way to
circumvent brain death criteria but as a means to
provide families with an additional option of
donation that complies with the patient or
authorized family directives. - Like all care at the end of life, donation after
cardiac death (DCD) should focus on the patient
and family
13Childrens Hospital of Orange County(CHOC)
- 208 bed free-standing Childrens hospital.
- Orange County, California
- 30 bed PICU
- Neurosurgery
- Cardiac surgery
- Many sub-specialties
- Not a Trauma Center
14Shared Services
- St. Josephs Hospital of Orange
- 300 bed Catholic adult facility with no
pediatric inpatient services except newborn
nursery - Emergency services
- Laboratory services
- Radiology
15Shared Services
- Surgical Services
- Staff
- Equipment
- PACU
- Anesthesia
16Donation After Cardiac Death
- First case for the hospitals
- St. Joseph patient
- 25 year old Retts Syndrome
- Opened the door for CHOC to start DCD
- Policies
- Mirror each other
- Meet the needs of both facilities
17Case 1
- L.R. 3 year old female
- Found face down in the swimming pool
- Unknown time since last seen
- No bystander CPR
- Asystolic when EMS arrived
- CPR started by EMS
- Asystolic upon arrival to ED
18Case 1 continued
- 45 minutes of CPR and multiple doses of
Epinephrine before return of spontaneous
circulation - ABG in ED
- pH 6.8
- PCO2 21
- PO2 669
- HCO3 3.2
- Base deficit -30.4
19Case 1 continued
- Transported from outside ED to our PICU
- Parents informed of grave prognosis
- After 3 days, parents requested to discontinue
support and inquired about organ donation - OneLegacy was contacted
20Case 1 continued
- Parents spoke only Spanish
- OneLegacy sent Spanish speaking requestor
- Consent for donation was obtained and patient was
stabilized for transport to OR
21First Case Scenario Hospital Staff Ready
Administration is on Board
- OR is set for 0900
- OR room prepared back table setup, slush
available, perfusion lines flushed - Parents are dressed in cover-alls, (bunny suits)
hats and mask - Parents will wait with the Family Care
Coordinator and priest outside the OR Department
until called to enter
22Team Assembled in the OR
- Surgical Recovery Team Liver and Assistant
Surgeon, Perfusion Technologist, local Kidney
Surgeon - OR Staff Circulating RNs x 2, Surgical
Technologist - ICU Staff RNs x 2 or 3, Respiratory Therapist
- Attending Physician
- OneLegacy Staff Surgical Recovery Coordinator,
Procurement Transplant Coordinator, Clinical
Manager - Anesthesia Care Provider may or may not be
present, depending on Hospital policy (Not
present in this case)
23Patient Enters the OR,Positioned on OR Bed at
0930
- Lead Surgeon calls a Huddle in the OR with all
staff involved to review action plan, test
mechanical equipment, check that all supplies are
ready for immediate use - Remind staff that this is a family-driven process
and the parents can halt the procedure at any
time
24Surgical Recovery Teams Not Present During
Withdrawal of Care Pronouncement
- Surgeons and Assistants will Scrub in, don
sterile gown and gloves - Surgical Team will then exit the OR room will
wait in a sub-sterile room or adjoining OR room - NOTE It is NEVER appropriate for the Surgical
Recovery Team to give orders, directions or
suggestions regarding the Withdrawal of Care
Process
25ICU Team Initiates the Withdrawal of Care Protocol
- Room lights are dimmed to soften the harsh
environment of the OR - Parents Priest are escorted into OR, given
chairs at the head of bed - Thorough oral suctioning performed and ET tube is
removed by the Attending Physician at 1049 - Death pronounced at 1120
26ICU Team Initiates the Withdrawal of Care
Protocol Continued
- Parents escorted from OR accompanied by Family
Care Coordinator and Priest - Organ recovery surgery commenced at 1130. Liver
and both kidneys were successfully recovered and
transplanted
27System Errors Identified
- Unavailability of scrubs for incoming teams
- Timing 0900 AM is a very busy time in the OR
making it difficult to acquire needed equipment - OR Staff is stressed not enough time to become
comfortable with this procedure as Huddle time
was limited - OR room assigned was adjacent to the OR Control
Desk - JOINT COMMISSION WAS IN THE OR DEPARTMENT THAT
DAY
28More Systems Errors(If that wasnt enough!)
- Patient did not have a functioning arterial line
- At the pronouncement of death, mom decompensated
- Once mom was composed enough to leave, dad
decompensated - Chosen exit route took the grieving entourage
through the PACU
29Case 2
- R.S. 3 month old female twin
- Found unresponsive in crib, unknown downtime
- CPR initiated by parents EMS called
- Asystolic when EMS arrived
- CPR continued by EMS
- 30 minutes of ALS before return of spontaneous
circulation
30Case 2 continued
- Non-accidental trauma work-up negative
- Metabolic work-up positive for fatty acid
oxidative defect - Parents informed of poor prognosis
- Family requested withdrawal of support and
inquired about organ donation - OneLegacy contacted
- Consent obtained for donation and patient
prepared for transport to OR
31Second Case Scenario
- Again, Hospital Administration is on board with
the DCD process - Pt is only 4.2 kg there are no local potential
recipients - Stanford University accepts the liver same local
kidney surgeon will recover kidneys - OR is booked for 1600
- Flight plans set for team to fly from Palo Alto
32Case Set Up, continued
- Family is made aware of plans and will remain at
the babys bedside until OR - Parents do not want to be present in the OR when
the heart stops instead they have requested the
Family Care Coordinator keep them informed of the
progress of the case - Parents will be in a secluded area near a back
exit to the OR - Priest will remain with the parents
33OR Preparation
- OR booked a room in the back hall of the OR
- OR staff was all volunteer, no one felt coerced
to participate - Extensive Huddling took place with the OR staff
- Scrub apparel was acquired early for incoming
surgical teams - OR room is prepared prior to patients arrival
- All equipment is tested and ready
34Everything is on Track for a Successful Organ
RecoveryWhat could go Wrong??
3520 Minutes prior to OR time
- Liver team from Stanford have experienced an
in-flight emergency - Loss of electrical power forces the plane to
return to ground immediately - The departure air-field is now closed due to fog
(San Francisco Bay area) - Flight is diverted to Sacramento (opposite of OC)
- Family is informed of 3-4 hr delay they are
willing to wait
36OR Delayed, continued
- OR staff will remain the same no need to
re-orient relief staff - OR staff is temporarily re-assigned to give
dinner breaks, prepare other cases - OR room remains Reserved for organ donation
372000Stanford team has arrived.
- The (frazzled) surgeons are immediately scrubbed
in, dressed in gowns and gloves, sequestered in
the sub-sterile room - Patient settled in the OR room Withdrawal of
Care protocol is initiated by ICU staff - OneLegacy PTC will record vital signs Q/min
- NOTE Considering that the parents are not
present, it is not necessary to dim the OR room
lights or play soft music. HOWEVER, out of
respect for the patient, we will keep voices low
and limit extraneous talk
38Pronouncement of Death
- Patient was pronounced dead 11 minutes after
withdrawal of life support - Parents are immediately informed babys blanket
and toy are returned to parents - Surgery starts after 5 minute pause
- Liver and kidneys successfully recovered
39What we learned
- Ethical considerations
- Who manages the patient in the PICU?
- Billing questions
- Going to the OR
40Ethical Considerations
- Staff Education
- Important to do up-front education
- Educate all staff not just nursing not just
critical care - DCD is not just confined to your PICU
41Ethical Issues
- Post-case Debriefing
- Dealing with the grieving staff
- Addressing issues right away
- Talking about DCD and the differences from Brain
Death donation.
42Patient Management
- PICU MDs must manage the care of the DCD patient
until they are declared dead. - Medical management of DCD patient is very
different from management of a brain death
donation.
43The Operating Room
- Patient is managed by the PICU team in the OR
until patient is pronounced. - ICU staff should be oriented to the OR before
starting a DCD program. - Pronouncing the patient can either fall to the MD
or RN.
44Operating Room
- Parents are present in the OR until the patient
is pronounced. - Parents are permitted to hold their child for a
short period following the death. - Dealing with parental grief.
- Exiting the parents from the OR.
45Conclusions/Lessons
- It is crucial to have a functional arterial line
in place prior to OR - This allows for precise observation and accurate
documentation of the onset of asystole - Timing of the OR is very important
- Best practiceplan OR for evening, night or early
AM when there will be fewer cases going on in the
department - Take adequate time for all the huddles
- OR staff changes and rotates around for meals and
breakshuddle everyone! - Extensive huddles encourage ownership of the
process
46Conclusion/Lessons Continued
- Anticipate the need for scrub apparel
- If your facility has a strict dress code that
requires anyone from the outside to change to
house scrub apparel, garner several sets of large
sized scrubs from the linen department to
accommodate anyone who may come in with the
recovery teams - Request an out of the way OR room
- Preferably one with an obscure point of egress to
allow the family to exit privately - Limits lookie-loos
47Conclusion/Lessons
- Expect that the parents will want to be with
their child at the time of death - Respect their wishes and their unique expressions
of grief - Expect that the OR staff will not be comfortable
with the parents coming into the OR - Acknowledge and validate their concerns
- Re-huddle!
- Encourage OR staff to come up with a solution
that will relieve their discomfort
48Conclusions/Lessons
- Remember the ICU Bubble
- Patient is under the care of the ICU team up to
and until death is pronounced - Only then will the donor fall under the
management of the OPO - ICU staff will direct the withdrawal of care and
pronouncement of death - OPO staff will serve as consultant and staff
support throughout the DCD process - Take advantage of their expertise
49Finally
- Debriefing of all staff involved should occur
within a week of the DCD donor - Allows staff to organize their thoughts,
questions - Acknowledges the unique role played by each
participant - Brings closure and hopefully satisfaction to a
tragic event - Encourages the real-time incorporation of
Lessons Learned into practice
50Where do we go from here?
- Recruit staff to be dedicated to donation cases.
- Develop policies around care of the patient from
ICU to pronunciation of death. - Establish protocols for care of the DCD patient.
51Questions??