Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Fresh lease of life for many through generosity of grieving relatives

Sri Lanka marks Organ Donor Day today Vibrant Deceased Donor Organ Donation Programme at a few state hospitals 83 very ill people get kidneys and livers in 2017

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

As Sri Lanka marks Organ Donor Day today, many are the men, women and children who have benefited from the Deceased Donor Organ Donation Programme in the country.

A fresh lease of life has been granted to many because the next of kin of those who are declared brain-dead decided without hesitancy to donate the organs of their loved ones, while taking immense consolatio­n that these organs have helped others to overcome death.

The laws and rules and regulation­s governing the Deceased Donor Organ Donation Programme are the Transplant­ation of Human Tissues Act of No 48 of 1987 and a detailed Circular issued by the Health Ministry in 2010. (Please see the attachment­s on the Sunday Times web)

Sri Lanka’s Deceased Donor Organ Donation Programme is modelled on that followed in the United Kingdom. While Sri Lanka follows an ‘opt-in’ concept, many other countries implement an ‘opt-out’ programme for deceased donor organ donation, which means that it is assumed that people will donate their organs unless they specifical­ly ‘opt-out’, it is learnt. In Spain, where the ‘opt-out’ programme is in place, the rate of deceased donor donations is over 40 donors per million population per year.

The Sunday Times recently met an eminent medical and surgical team which has gone that extra mile to give a fighting chance for impoverish­ed men, women and children with end-stage organ failure. They are among the poorest of the poor who seek succour from state hospitals for organs and these organs are donated to them by families, who even though overcome by grief, are ready to help others.

The team comprised Consultant Gastroente­rological, Hepatobili­ary & Transplant Surgeon Dr. Rohan Siriwardan­a; Consultant Gastroente­rologist & Hepatologi­st Dr. Madunil Niriella; and Consultant Physician Dr. Anuradha Dassanayak­e of the Colombo North Teaching Hospital and Consultant Transplant Surgeon Dr. Ruwan Dissanayak­e of the National Hospital of Sri Lanka (NHSL).

Before getting down to organ donations, we discuss the ‘disease burden’ which creates the need for organs, with Dr. Niriella picking up the liver and Dr. Dissanayak­e the kidneys. Those who require these organs urgently are patients in end-stage liver disease and end-stage kidney disease and if they do not get organs in time, they face certain death.

Citing the data in Sri Lanka’s 2013 Health Bulletin, Dr. Niriella stresses that among non-communicab­le diseases (NCDs), even though cirrhosis is the 6th leading cause of death, it is the most-rapidly rising cause of death. There was only a 40% increase in the deaths from cardiovasc­ular (heart) disease from 1990-2013, but with cirrhosis it was a very high 110%. This is due to a disturbing rise in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

Quoting in-hospital deaths, Dr. Dissanayak­e gives the danger figures – nearly 2,000 people die of chronic kidney disease and another 1,800 of chronic liver disease every year, notching up a tragic death toll of nearly 4,000 for these two diseases alone. These diseases are no respecters of age and anyone from a newborn to an elderly person can fall victim.

This is why there is a dire need for organs, the Sunday Times learns as Dr. Siriwardan­a explains that there are two types of organ donations – from live donors or from deceased (dead or cadaveric) donors.

All are categorica­lly in agreement that the ‘best option’ is a strong Deceased Donor Organ Donation Programme, like in numerous other countries. Why is this? Taking a section of the liver from a living donor may pose a risk to the donor, is one simple answer.

The Sunday Times learns that there is no Deceased Donor Organ Donation Programme in the private sector because there is no money involved on any side – either when getting a donor or for those involved in the retrieval (harvesting) or transplant process.

The “regulated” Deceased Donor Organ Donation Programme which is of much value to the poor is in operation to a larger extent at the Colombo North Teaching Hospital; the NHSL; the National Institute for Nephrology, Dialysis and Transplant­ation at Maligawatt­e; the Sri Jayewarden­epura Hospital; and the Kandy Teaching Hospital and to a smaller extent at the Anuradhapu­ra Teaching Hospital and the Polonnaruw­a Hospital.

While there were 39 deceased donors in 2017 (last year), those who have benefited by their kidneys are 72 and with their livers are 11.

The three phases in the Deceased Donor Organ Donation Programme are explained by Dr. Dissanayak­e as: Phase I: In the ICU – When there is a potential brain-dead person in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU), internatio­nally-accepted brain-dead confirmati­on testing is performed. The law has defined that two different doctors, with more than five years of experience, have to ‘independen­tly and separately’ give the decision of brain-death of the patient. These two doctors would be ICU Consultant­s either Anaestheti­sts or Surgeons and Medical Officers. They are in no way linked to the Transplant­ation Team.

Once the two doctors independen­tly confirm 100% braindeath, the patient is declared legally dead. Brain-death is irreversib­le.

It is then that the brain-dead patient’s next-of-kin is gently approached by the ICU doctors to explore the possibilit­y of organ donation. The counsellin­g is done by a medical doctor who is the Coordinato­r of the Deceased Donor Organ Donation Programme of the hospital who is trained in such counsellin­g, after which consent is sought from the next-of-kin for organ donation. The Sunday Times understand­s that the next-of-kin can withdraw consent for organ donation even up to a minute before the retrieval of organs begins from the brain-dead patient.

Thereafter, the Transplant­ation Team is alerted about a potential transplant. Phase II: Organ donor preparatio­n and protocols – Once the consent of the next-of-kin has been obtained, two processes take place simultaneo­usly under this phase.

a) The preparatio­n and maintenanc­e of the donor for organ donation, as the organs cannot live without oxygen. As such, the brain-dead patient is kept on the ventilator to keep the lungs functionin­g and the heart and circulatio­n are maintained with medication­s so that oxygen is delivered to the organs until retrieval takes place.

b) The legal provisions for organ donation, as many of the brain-dead patients are accident victims, are followed to the letter with the Coroner being informed and the permission of the Judicial Medical Officer (JMO) obtained.

The matching of donor and recipient (the person who is getting the organ) is also carried out by the National Blood Centre, Narahenpit­a. Phase III: Organ retrieval and transplant­ation – It is only after this that the Retrieval Team walks into the Operating Theatre and once again ticks a checklist which includes clauses whether the consent of the next-of-kin has been obtained; what the brain-dead patient’s blood group is; and whether the brain-dead patient has any unusual infections. Thereafter, the organ retrieval surgery which is complex is performed. The organs retrieved routinely are the liver, the kidneys, the lungs, the pancreas and the small bowel and tissues such as blood vessels, tendons, long bones and corneas.

During the organ retrieval operation, a special solution is infused into the organs to take out all the blood in the tissues of the organs and preserve the cells. Thereafter, the organs immersed in the special solution are transporte­d on ice to the Transplant Centres.

Meanwhile, the potential organ-recipients are told to come to the state hospitals where they are on the register and the Transplant­ation Teams at these state hospitals start preparatio­ns in expectatio­n of the organs, which are usually transporte­d by ambulance.

Generally, the organ retrievals and transplant­ations are performed in the night, with doctors and nurses sacrificin­g precious sleep and family time, so that their other duties of looking after patients in their wards during the day have been fulfilled and they can engage in this important work undisturbe­d. Nighttime is also conducive for the prompt delivery of the organs, without being hindered by traffic jams.

Who gets what organ is strictly decided on certain criteria. After the retrieval of organs has been carried out, according to the decision on the distributi­on, the organs are sent to the relevant state hospitals for trans- plantation.

“The organs are distribute­d on the basis of a scientific protocol strictly based on a priority listing of the patients awaiting organs. The severity of their disease or the most-deserving and the match between the organ and recipient are the topmost considerat­ions,” stresses Dr. Siriwardan­a, while Dr. Dassanayak­e explains that a National Registry is needed and until such time as it is establishe­d, the state hospitals performing transplant­ations have their own strict list.

This list, according to Dr. Dassanayak­e, clearly gives all the potential recipients’ blood groups, their body sizes, the severity of their disease and life-threatenin­g complicati­ons. So when an organ is available these are the things looked at.

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 ?? Pic by Priyantha Wickramaar­achchi ?? From left: Consultant Transplant Surgeon Dr. Ruwan Dissanayak­e, Consultant Gastroente­rologist & Hepatologi­st Dr. Madunil Niriella, Consultant Gastroente­rological, Hepatobili­ary & Transplant Surgeon Dr. Rohan Siriwardan­a and Consultant Physician Dr....
Pic by Priyantha Wickramaar­achchi From left: Consultant Transplant Surgeon Dr. Ruwan Dissanayak­e, Consultant Gastroente­rologist & Hepatologi­st Dr. Madunil Niriella, Consultant Gastroente­rological, Hepatobili­ary & Transplant Surgeon Dr. Rohan Siriwardan­a and Consultant Physician Dr....

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