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Assessing Declined Liver Grafts With Normothermic Machine Perfusion to Reduce Transplant Waiting Time

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Liver Transplantation
Liver Diseases
Surgery
Registration Number
NCT06874296
Lead Sponsor
Charite University, Berlin, Germany
Brief Summary

The goal of this study is to find out if quality assessment by normothermic machine perfusion can be used to safely increase the number of usable donor livers, helping more people get transplants faster and with better results. This process keeps a donated liver working outside the body before transplantation, allowing surgeons to assess whether livers previously considered unsuitable can still be used.

The main questions this study aims to answer are:

* Does this method help patients get a transplant sooner?

* Can this method make more livers available for transplant?

* Does it improve survival and health after transplant?

Participants in this study must be on the waiting list for a liver transplant with a ReMELD-Na-Score of 21 or less (equivalent to MELD ≤25) and must not qualify for certain special exceptions. Participants will be randomly placed into one of two groups:

* Experimental group: In addition to regular organ offers, these participants may receive a liver that was initially not considered for transplantation but meets quality standards after at least four hours of machine perfusion.

* Control group: These participants will receive a liver through the usual transplant process.

The main measure of success is how quickly participants receive a transplant. Researchers will also look at other important factors, such as survival rates, quality of life, hospital stay, and complications after transplant.

This study may help improve liver transplantation by making better use of available donor livers, reducing waiting times, and improving patient outcomes.

Detailed Description

Liver transplantation is the treatment of choice for patients with advanced liver cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma within the Milan criteria, and severe metabolic or autoimmune liver diseases. However, organ shortage remains a significant issue, particularly in Germany, where only 58% of patients on the waiting list received a transplant in 2022. Patients with MELD ≤25, who are ineligible for \[Non\]-Standard Exception criteria, face particularly long waiting times and lower transplant rates.

Despite the shortage, approximately 24% of all liver grafts in Germany are declined due to donor age, macrosteatosis, or prolonged cold ischemia. Emerging technologies, such as NMP, allow for objective graft quality assessment before transplantation. Several non-randomized studies in the UK, Netherlands, Australia, and the USA have demonstrated the potential of NMP to increase organ utilization. The ExTra trial is the first randomized controlled study to investigate whether declined liver grafts, following NMP-based quality assessment, can safely and effectively reduce the waiting time for patients with ReMELD-Na-Score ≤ 21(equivalent to MELD ≤25).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
186
Inclusion Criteria
  • Able to consent
  • ≥ 18 years old
  • Listed in status "transplantable" by the transplant conference of the study centre for liver transplantation, according to the guidelines of the German Medical Association valid at the time of inclusion
  • ReMELD-Na-Score ≤ 21 (equivalent to MELD ≤25), not eligible for [non]standard exceptions
  • Medically suitable and informed for transplantation with an organ that fulfils extended donor criteria (Eurotransplant ECD criteria)
  • Patient information and written consent to participate in the Extra trial
  • No participation in another interventional study during participation
Exclusion Criteria
  • Listed for retransplantation
  • High-Urgency Listing
  • Listed for combined organ transplantation
  • Pregnancy

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Time-to-TransplantFrom date of randomization to liver transplantation (up to 12 months after date of randomization)
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
DeathFrom date of randomization to death (up to 12 months after date of randomization)

Patient death during the 12-month intervention period, regardless of liver transplantation or not.

Disease ProgressionFrom date of randomization to event (up to 12 months after date of randomization)

Change of ReMELD-Na-Score above 21 while listed as "transplantable" on the waitlist. Occurence of new contraindication for liver transplantation

Proportion of Patients Recovered on the WaitlistFrom date of randomization to event (up to 12 months after date of randomization)

Proportion of patients with change in overall health that no liver transplantation is further required in relation to all patients on the waitlist in the trial.

Number of patients listed for transplantation after 12 months12 months after randomization

Number of patients listed for transplantation after 12 months.

Overall patient survivalFrom date of randomization to death (up to 24 months after date of randomization)

Overall patient survival in the study.

Patient-reported Quality of Lifeup to 24 months

Patient-reported Quality of Life measured in the EuroQOL EQ5DL. Two aspects will be reported: The EuroQOL visual analog scale (EQ VAS) on a scale from 0-100 points and the proportion of responses by level of severity for the five EQ-5D-5L dimensions (each reported on a five level scale).

Graft utilization rateup to 12 months

Proportion of used livers of all organs offered to patients on the waiting list

Inpatient Costs for Liver TransplantationFirst 90 days after liver transplantation

Analysis of liver transplantation-associated costs. This will be total costs, earnings and profit measured in Euros (EUR) for the primary inpatient stay of liver transplantation.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Department of Surgery Campus Charité Mitte | Campus Virchow-Klinikum, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin

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Berlin, Germany

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