Title: Pediatric Donor Management: A Case Study
1Pediatric Donor ManagementA Case Study
Thomas A. Nakagawa, M.D, FAAP, FCCM Pediatric
Critical Care Medicine Brenner Childrens
Hospital, North Carolina Baptist Medical Center
Department of Anesthesiology and Pediatrics Wake
Forest University School of Medicine Winston-Salem
, North Carolina
2Questions To Run On
- What can we do to optimize donation for children
and their families? - What effective practices can we provide to our
colleagues to increase organs available for
transplantation in children?
3Case presentation
- A 2 year old presents to an outside hospital
with a chief complaint of lethargy. On the day of
admission the child was lethargic, had a low
grade fever and emesis in the early morning.
Examination revealed blood pressure of 100/66,
heart rate of 96, respiratory rate of 16,
temperature 99.6. This child is lethargic, but
does arouse to noxious stimulation. Pupils are
equal and reactive to light. Lungs are clear to
auscultation. He is warm and well perfused. He
is given a single dose of Ceftriaxone and a
lumbar puncture is performed. CSF is cloudy with
120,000 WBCs and gram positive cocci noted on
the gram stain. Differential is 90 PMN cells.
CSF chemistries reveal a protein of 1500, glucose
lt 10. Arrangements are made for hospital
admission. -
4Case presentation (cont)
- Two hours following his lumbar puncture the
child has an episode of emesis, becomes
bradycardic, and develops apnea followed by
asystole. Closed chest compressions are
initiated, he is intubated with possible
aspiration of gastric contents reported. He
receives 2 doses of epinephrine and one dose of
atropine with ROSC after 6 minutes. His blood
pressure is 60/40. He receives a fluid bolus of
normal saline and a dopamine infusion is started.
Provisions are made for transport to the
tertiary care childrens hospital. - En route to the childrens hospital this child
has another cardiac arrest. His dopamine had
been escalated to 20 mcg/kg/min and he received
an additional dose of epinephrine with ROSC.
Upon arrival to the PICU, this child is comatose.
Vital signs blood pressure is 80/36, heart
rate is 110, no spontaneous respiratory effort is
noted. Temperature is 93.6. Neurologic exam
reveals fixed and dilated pupils. No cough,
corneal or gag reflexes are noted. He has
minimal movement of his left shoulder with
noxious central stimulation. He continues on a
dopamine infusion at 20 ug/kg/min an epinephrine
infusion at 0.3 ug/kg/min. He has brisk clear
urine output.
5Has this child achieved neurologic death?
- He has fixed and dilated pupils.
- He has no cough corneal or gag reflexes.
- His body temperature is 93.6
- His blood pressure is relatively low for a 4
year old - Systolic blood pressure 2(age in years) 80
-
- Lowest acceptable SBP 2(age in years) 70
6- There are no unique legal issues in determining
brain death in children as compared with adults.
The unique issues are all medical ones and
related directly to the more difficult tasks of
confirming brain death in young children
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8- C. Older than one year of age when an
irreversible cause exists, ancillary testing is
not required and an observation period of 12
hours is recommended. There are conditions,
particularly hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy, in
which is it difficult to assess the extent of
reversible brain damage. This is particularly
true if the first examination is performed soon
after the acute event. In this situation, a more
prolonged period of at least 24 hours of
observation is recommended. The observation
period may be decreased if the EEG demonstrates
electrocerebral silence or the cerebral
radionuclide or cerebral angiography study
demonstrates no flow or visualization of the
cerebral vessels.
American Academy of Pediatrics Task Force, 1987
9Understanding limitations of pediatric brain
death guidelines
- Guidelines that are almost 20 years old
- Guidelines that did not address the trauma
population - Guidelines based upon limited clinical experience
at the time of publication - Guidelines based upon age criteria
- No guidelines for neurologic death in neonates
- Waiting times have never been validated
10This child has not achieved neurologic death
- Although he has lost most of his brain stem
reflexes, he has some movement with central
stimulation - He has received atropine
- Atropine dilates pupils but does not make them
non-reactive - Brain death criteria in children requires two
examinations according to the Task Force
Guidelines published in 1987
11So now what will you do?
- A. Do nothing
- B. Tell the parents the situation is hopeless
and allow the child to die - C. Continue supportive care to maintain blood
pressure and organ system function
12- Supportive care was continued. Central venous
access and arterial cannulation have occurred.
Inotropic support was continued along with volume
resuscitation. Mechanical ventilation continued
with increased PEEP due to a PaO2 of 140 on an
FiO2 of 1.0. Urine output was excessive. Urine
output was replaced cc/cc with 1/2 NS.
Antibiotic therapy was continued. It was unclear
if this child received vancomycin at the
referring facility. A vancomycin level on
admission was 1.6. - Discussions with the parents occurred throughout
the day. The parents understood that their
childs condition was critical and that he may
not survive this event.
13- Over the next several hours hemodynamics
remained unstable. Inotropic support was
titrated to maintain systolic blood pressures
gt 84 mmHg. Oxygenation and ventilation were
easily controlled. PaO2 increased to 410 torr on
an FiO2 of 1.0. Lactate was 1.9. Serum Na had
increased from 139 to 156 mg/dl. Urine output
replacement continued and a vasopressin infusion
was started to help control urine output.
14Pharmacologic Management of Diabetes Insipidus
- Vasopressin (Pitressin)
- Correction of hypernatremia with hemodynamic
instability - Dose
- Continuous IV infusion 0.5 milliunits/kg/hour
titrated to effect - Desmopressin (DDAVP)
- Correction of hypernatremia without hemodynamic
instability secondary to greater ADH effect - Correction of hypernatremia with associated
bleeding problems ( coagulopathy) - Dose
- Continuous infusion rate 0.5 µg/hour titrated
to effect - These agents are ineffective when administered by
the intranasal or subcutaneous route in this
patient population
15So now what will you do?
- A. Continue current care to maintain blood
pressure and organ system function - B. Initiate a thyroid hormone infusion
- C. Administer IV solucortef
- D. Tell the parents the situation is hopeless
and allow the child to die
16Hormonal replacement therapy
- Consider using HRT early in the course of donor
management - There is no contraindication to using HRT in a
patient prior to neurologic death - Steroids for sepsis
- Thyroid hormone in post-operative cardiac
patients and patients with hypothyroidism - Vasopressin and desmopressin are routinely used
for the treatment of DI - Hormonal replacement therapy decreases the need
for inotropic support in children - Zuppa AF, Nadkarni V, Davis L, et al. The effect
of a thyroid hormone infusion on vasopressor
support in critically ill children with cessation
of neurologic function. - Crit Care Med 2004322318-2322.
- As neurologic death occurs, alteration in the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA axis)
occurs
17Impairment of the HPA axis
Impaired posterior pituitary function results in
loss of anti-diuretic hormone (ADH)
18Hormone Replacement Therapy
- Thyroid hormone replacement
- Levothyroxine (T4)
- Triidothyronine (T3)
- Steroid replacement
- Hydrocortisone
- Control of DI
- Vasopressin (Pitressin)
- Desmopressin (DDAVP)
- Control of hyperglycemia
- Insulin
19Thyroid hormone
- Effects of thyroid hormone
- Increases cardiac output
- Increases heart rate
- Increases ventilation rate
- Increases basal metabolic rate
- Affects cellular metabolism
- Administration of thyroid hormone
- Triiodothyronine (T3)
- Active form of thyroid hormone
- T3 is converted from T4 (thyroxine) in the
peripheral circulation by deiodinase - T3 is 4 times more active than T4
- Dose 0.05-0.15 mcg/kg/hour titrated to effect
- Thyroxine (T4)
20Thyroid hormone (cont)
- Levothyroxine (Synthroid, T4)
- Route of administration IV continuous infusion
- Dose 1 mcg/kg/hour titrated to effect
Zuppa AF, et al. Critical Care Medicine
2004322318-2322
21Additional considerations
- Dopamine for hemodynamic support
- Dopamine inhibits TSH production
- Decreased TSH production results in decreased
release of thyroid hormone from therapy to
maintain hemodynamic stability - Decrease of TSH from CNS insult and alteration of
the HPA axis - Potential donor is in a relative hypothyroid state
22Steroids
- Steroid production will be inhibited or lost due
to CNS insult and loss of the HPA axis - The use of steroids should be considered early in
the course of the child with hemodynamic
instability that is minimally responsive to
aggressive inotropic support - Steroids up-regulate adrenergic receptors making
them more sensitive to the effects of
catecholamines - Enhance response to inotropes
- May provide an important role in stabilization of
pulmonary function for the potential donor
23Why start HRT early?
- HRT is inexpensive
- Adverse effects to the potential donor are
minimal - It may increase graft function post-operatively
- Continued therapy for the dying child reinforces
to the parents that everything humanly possible
is being done for their child
24- HRT using levothyroxine and solucortef was
initiated. Vasopressin was continued with
improved control of urine output. Over the next
12 hours inotropic support had been reduced to 4
ug/kg/min of dopamine. Serum Na had decreased
to 140 mg/dl. This childs neurologic exam
continued to deteriorate and he eventually lost
all movement to noxious central stimulation. An
apnea test was performed. There was no
spontaneous respiratory effort with a PaCO2 of 87
torr after 10 minutes. - Supportive care was continued. The parents were
present during the examination and understood the
clinical implications of the neurologic
examination and apnea test. A second brain death
examination occurred 12 hours later.
25- The following morning this childs clinical
examination remained unchanged. A second brain
death exam including an apnea test was performed.
The brain death examination remained consistent
with neurologic death. The child was pronounced
at 0745 hours. - The parents consented to organ donation. 26
hours after declaration of death, this child went
to the operating suite for recovery of organs.
26The importance of declaring neurologic death in a
timely manner
- Allows families and society to begin the grieving
process - Prevents us from wasting valuable resources in
critical care units - 25 of potential donors are lost due to
hemodynamic instability following neurologic
death - Early and aggressive use of hormonal replacement
therapy can enhance organ recovery and result in
improved graft function - Rosendale JD, Kauffman HM, McBride MA, et al.
Aggressive pharmacologic donor management results
in more transplanted organs. Transplantation
200375482-487.
27- Early HRT is only part of good donor management
- Donor management must be guided with input from
the pediatric intensivist and critical care team - Collaboration with the transplant coordinator,
OPO, chaplain, social and other support services
is vital for successful donation to occur - Communication with the family is imperative for
donation to be successful - Hormonal replacement therapy can be initiated
prior to declaration of death - Hormonal replacement therapy appears to decrease
the need for inotropic support - Zuppa AF, Nadkarni V, Davis L, et al. The effect
of a thyroid hormone infusion on vasopressor
support in critically ill children with cessation
of neurologic function. - Crit Care Med 2004322318-2322.
- Does early HRT improve organs available for
transplantation?
28Pediatric Donors Brenner Childrens Hospital,
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center.
2004-2006
2004-2005 10 donors Recovered 4.5 organs per
donor Transplanted 4.1 organs per
donor 2006 5 donors Recovered 4 organs per
donor Transplanted 4 organs per donor
2007 2 donors Recovered 3 organs per
donor Both donors were DCD donors ages
18 and 10 months
29Questions To Run On
- What information have you gained from this
presentation that can help you optimize donation
for children and their families? - What effective practices can we provide to our
colleagues to increase organs available for
transplantation in children?
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33Conclusions
- Good donor management equals good patient care
- Collaboration between the OPO and the Pediatric
Intensivist and critical care team is essential
for good outcomes - Early hormonal replacement therapy can increase
the number and quality of organs available for
transplantation - DCD has the potential to increase organs
available for transplantation in children - Timely declaration of neurologic death and
meticulous care directed towards the preservation
of organs for transplantation is essential for
positive outcomes - In cases where homicide has claimed the life of a
child, early involvement and close collaboration
with the medical examiner and investigative team
can help alleviate any conflict between
preservation of evidence and organ recovery
34Bold Request
- Meet with your transplant coordinators and your
colleagues to discuss issues pertaining to
pediatric donation. - Make the commitment to make your center a center
of excellence for end of life care - Physician accountability and responsibility
- Choose one of the best practices and institute
this practice in your unit to see if it improves
your outcome with recovered organs for your next
three potential organ donors. - A strong relationship with the OPO
- Early involvement of the OPO
- Declaration of death in a timely manner
- Early hormonal replacement therapy to assist with
hemodynamic instability
35Important area for growth
- Pediatric DCD
- DCD targets the two most needed organs for
children - DCD requires extensive collaboration with the
physicians, nursing staff, OR staff, OPO, and the
family to ensure the best outcomes - Although DCD pediatric donors may be a small
percentage of the entire pediatric donor pool,
DCD should be considered for any child, and their
family, who are facing end-of-life issues - Ethical issues surrounding DCD
- Utilize colleagues who are comfortable with this
type of donation to care for and work with
families who request donation - Work to improve understanding of all issues
related to DCD - Better understand issues of when a person is
really dead
36Pediatric DCD donors
Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients.
2006 Pediatrics patients lt 18 years of age
37Potential for DCD to increase organ donation in
children
- The potential for DCD to increase organ donation
is children - The routine use of NHBD has the potential to
increase organ donation at our institution by 42 - Koogler T, Costarino AT Jr. The potential
benefits of the pediatric nonheartbeating organ
donor. Pediatrics. 19981011049-1052. - 7 additional donors and 14 additional kidneys
over a 3 year period (47 consent rate
assumption) - Durall AL, Laussen PC, Randolph AG. Potential
for donation after cardiac death in a childrens
hospital. Pediatrics 2007119e219-224.