Récipiendaire de la bourse CDTRP TGLN Ontario Health Research Innovation – Pilot Study to Explore Ethical Issues and Stakeholder Trust in the Use of Normothermic Regional Perfusion in Organ Donation in Canada (Charles Weijer)
Grâce à sa collaboration avec des organisations partenaires, le PRDTC est heureux d’offrir son Concours de subventions à la recherche et l’innovation pour financer de nouvelles idées de projets passionnants. Au cours des prochaines semaines, nous présenterons tous les projets financés dans le cadre du concours de 2021.
« Félicitations au Dr Weijer et à son équipe pour la subvention pour leur projet passionnant. Nous avons hâte de connaître les résultats de leur étude dans ce domaine important. Soutenir l’innovation dans le domaine du don et de la transplantation a toujours été une priorité absolue pour le ministère de la Santé de l’Ontario (Réseau Trillium pour le don de vie), et nous tenons à remercier tous les candidats pour leur intérêt et leur engagement à l’égard de l’avancement de la science dans ce domaine. »
– Janet MacLean, Vice Présidente – Don, Santé Ontario (Réseau Trillium pour le don de vie)
Financé grâce à CDTRP TGLN Ontario Health Research Innovation Grant
Titre : Pilot Study to Explore Ethical Issues and Stakeholder Trust in the Use of Normothermic Regional Perfusion in Organ Donation in Canada
- Chercheur principal : Charles Weijer
- Principale affiliation : Western University
- Thème 1
Résumé (en anglais)
Organ donation after circulatory death has increased the number of organs available for people awaiting a transplant in Canada. Yet because the dying process deprives organs of oxygen, with each passing minute organs are damaged. As a result, the full potential of donation after circulatory death has not been realized: donated organs have worse function in recipients—and some organs cannot be used for transplantation. Normothermic regional perfusion is an innovative surgical technology that seeks to reverse organ injury by mechanically circulating oxygenated blood inside the donor’s body after their death. However, normothermic regional perfusion raises ethical concerns which have slowed its adoption in Canada. These ethical issues have never been systematically described, nor has their potential impact on trust in deceased donation been explored. Because stakeholder trust in organ donation is indispensable, there is an urgent need to understand stakeholder perspectives on normothermic regional perfusion before it is used in Canada. Our pilot project will identify the ethical issues in normothermic regional perfusion and develop a model of how these may impact trust in donation. We will conduct a review of the medical and bioethical literature, conduct interviews with deceased donor families, transplant recipients, health care professionals and institutional stakeholders in the donation community, and hold focus groups with healthcare providers. The findings of our study will lay the foundation for future work aimed at developing solutions to these ethical issues and developing policy to guide the implementation and use of normothermic regional perfusion in Canada.