Objective: Reduction of the cold ischaemia time is one of the major objectives designed to improve the quality and cost of renal transplantation. Based on the experience of other centres, we report the impact of using a renal transplantation timesheet on the cold ischaemia time in our centre.
Material and method: Since March 2004, we have used a renal transplantation timesheet with the collaboration of all personnel involved in transplantation (coordination, nephrologists, clinical pathologists). For each kidney harvested, the name of the personnel and the start and end times of their interventions were recorded. The authors report the results for the first 7 months. Cold ischaemia times and the incidence of delayed graft function were studied.
Results: 47 kidneys were harvested between 01/03/2004 and 30/9/2004 in our centre and 46 transplantations were performed. The mean cold ischaemia time was 14 h 51 min, i.e. a reduction of 8 hours 58 minutes compared to that observed in 2003 (23 h 50 min) (p < 0.01). Delayed graft function (DGF) was observed in 10/46 (21.74%) recipients. This DGF rate was significantly lower than that observed in 2003 (DGF 2003 = 30%), while the mean donor serum creatinine was higher (155 +/- 177 micromol/l vs 98 +/- 71 micromol/l in 2003, p < 0.05). The longest delays were those related to availability of an operating room (n=2: 10 h and 14 h).
Conclusion: The use of a renal transplantation timesheet allowed a significant reduction of the cold ischaemia time and DGF rate. It requires the collaboration of all renal transplantation personnel and is an indicator of motivation. This timesheet allowed the correction of certain habits that can still be improved. These results should lead to an improvement of the results and cost of renal transplantation.