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Utility of deceased donor cultures in solid organ transplantation in preventing donor‐derived bacterial and fungal infectious diseases transmission
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Boutin, Catherine‐Audrey (Author)
- Pouch, Stephanie M. (Author)
- Ison, Michael G. (Author)
Title
Utility of deceased donor cultures in solid organ transplantation in preventing donor‐derived bacterial and fungal infectious diseases transmission
Abstract
Deceased donor and organ perfusion fluid cultures are obtained in order to inform recipient antimicrobial management and therefore reduce the risk of donor-derived bacterial and fungal infections. However, important heterogeneity exists in laboratory practice across organ procurement organizations and clinical management of culture results across transplant centers. While not standardized, the clinical approach to donors with positive bacterial and/or fungal cultures should be informed by the risk of donor-derived infection (DDI) and the consequence of organ non-utilization and account for potential unintended effects of antimicrobial use in the recipient. In this review, we summarize the literature on bacterial and fungal DDIs, describe the significance of positive cultures by anatomic site, and summarize current guidance on the management of positive cultures from donors or preservation fluids.
Publication
Transplant Infectious Disease
Date
2023-02-07
Journal Abbr
Transplant Infectious Dis
Accessed
3/12/23, 11:22 AM
ISSN
1398-2273, 1399-3062
Language
en
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Boutin, C., Pouch, S. M., & Ison, M. G. (2023). Utility of deceased donor cultures in solid organ transplantation in preventing donor‐derived bacterial and fungal infectious diseases transmission. Transplant Infectious Disease. https://doi.org/10.1111/tid.14032
CORE CURRICULUM
SOLID ORGANS AND MCSS
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