Background: Pentoxifylline (PTX) pretreatment of recipients was shown to protect against liver graft failure from ischemia-reperfusion injury after orthotopic rat liver transplantation. It has also been shown that PTX protects against normothermic ischemia-reperfusion injury to the liver in lobar ischemia model in the rat. Whether PTX can benefit the liver procured from non-heart-beating donors (NHBDs) with up to 9 hr of cold ischemia is unknown.
Methods: Donor and recipient rats were pretreated with intraperitoneal PTX (50 mg/kg) 1 hr before cardiac arrest and transplantation, respectively. Grafts were transplanted 0, 30, and 60 min after cardiac arrest with additional 1 and 9 hr of cold ischemia in both PTX-pretreated or untreated (control) groups (10 rats per group). PTX (25 mg/kg/day) was continuously given to the surviving rats for 5 days postoperatively. Recipient survival rates, serum enzyme levels, and histopathological examination of postreperfusion liver biopsies were all analyzed.
Results: The survival rates, serum enzyme levels, and postreperfusion histology were significantly improved in groups pretreated with PTX compared to the controls.
Conclusion: Donor and recipient PTX pretreatment significantly improves the viability of the liver grafts procured from NHBDs.