Anti-infective management in brain-dead organ donors - A retrospective analysis at two centers reveals need for improvement

Englbrecht, JS; Bracht, H; Gehrenkemper, JP; Borgstedt, R; Witzke, D; Gottschalk, A; Lanckohr, C

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Background Adequate donor management is essential to increase the number of transplantable organs. No specific recommendations about anti-infective management for organ donors are available and the sparse literature indicates that antimicrobials are used too liberally. We analyzed anti-infective management of brain-dead donors to add to the limited evidence. Methods All brain-dead donors at the University Hospitals Münster (2010–2024) and Bielefeld Bethel (2020–2024) were retrospectively included. The use and indication of antimicrobials, microbiological diagnostics and inflammatory markers were assessed during intensive care unit stay and organ retrieval. Results 149 donors were included, 76.5 % received antimicrobials in the intensive care unit and 21.5 % during organ retrieval. Antimicrobial exposure did not correlate between both periods. Indication for antimicrobials was documented in 61 % of donors, with aspiration pneumonia (33 %) and ventilator-associated pneumonia (33 %) being the most common diagnoses. Positive microbiological cultures were found in 36 % of donors but without correlation to antimicrobial exposure or length of exposure. The proportion of donors with out of normal range values for C-reactive protein (67–100 %), white blood cell count (53–88 %) and procalcitonin (22–43 %) was high, but only C-reactive protein differed between the day before and the day of brain death diagnosis and between infected and non-infected donors. Conclusion Antimicrobial use was high during intensive care unit stay, low during organ retrieval and inconsistent between both periods. Inflammatory markers were insufficient to indicate infection. Aggravated by a lack of evidence-based recommendations, this indicates inadequate anti-infective management of DBD donors, which may have a negative impact on the organ recipient.

Details about the publication

JournalJournal of Critical Care
Volume90
IssueDecember 2025
StatusPublished
Release year2025 (21/07/2025)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1016/j.jcrc.2025.155196
Link to the full texthttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0883944125001832?via%3Dihub
KeywordsOrgan donation; Brain death; Inflammation; Anti-infective management; Infection; Antimicrobials

Authors from the University of Münster

Englbrecht, Jan Sönke
Clinic for Anaesthesiology, Surgical Critical Care Medicine and Pain Therapy