Machine Perfusion: Can It Become a Standard Practice in Organ Transplantation in Türkiye?
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Letter to the Editor
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15 June 2026

Machine Perfusion: Can It Become a Standard Practice in Organ Transplantation in Türkiye?

Turk J Clin Cardiov Perfusion. Published online 15 June 2026.
1. University of Health Science Gülhane Training and Research Hospital, Organ Transplant Coordination Center, Ankara, Türkiye
No information available.
No information available
Received Date: 09.12.2025
Accepted Date: 31.05.2026
E-Pub Date: 15.06.2026
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Dear Editor,

The ongoing shortage of donor organs has underscored the need for improved preservation strategies in transplantation. Machine perfusion (MP) technologies have been shown to enhance the utilization of organs obtained from donors after brain death and from extended-criteria donors, compared with conventional static cold storage (1, 2). In a setting such as Türkiye, where the donor pool remains limited and donation rates have not yet reached optimal levels, MP represents a substantial opportunity to expand organ availability.

In kidney transplantation, hypothermic MP has been associated with a significant reduction in delayed graft function and with improved one-year graft survival (3). In liver transplantation, hypothermic oxygenated perfusion (HOPE) has demonstrated reductions in biliary complications, non-anastomotic strictures, early allograft dysfunction, and graft loss in multiple meta-analyses (4-6). These data provide compelling evidence for the role of MP in preserving organ quality and improving recipient outcomes.

The implementation of MP as a standard practice at a national level requires considerations that extend beyond device procurement. Adequate device availability, the development of trained perfusionist teams, standardization of clinical protocols, and systematic long-term outcome monitoring are essential components of this process. Ongoing training initiatives and quality efforts in cardiac surgery in Türkiye suggest that such infrastructure can be successfully established (7).

International experience further demonstrates that MP technologies are moving rapidly toward routine clinical use. In the Netherlands, Germany, and the United Kingdom, HOPE and ex vivo assessment platforms are increasingly applied, particularly for high-risk and marginal donor livers, with reported improvements in early graft dysfunction and biliary complication rates (8, 9). In the United States, the widespread clinical adoption of portable normothermic perfusion systems has increased acceptance of extended-criteria donor organs and has been associated with reduced waiting-list mortality (10). These observations indicate that MP has transitioned from an experimental technique to an established component of contemporary transplantation practice.

MP offers a strategic opportunity for Türkiye to both expand the donor organ pool and enhance transplant outcomes. Realizing this potential, however, requires parallel progress in training, infrastructure, protocol harmonization, and nationwide data collection. Accordingly, gradual integration of MP into national transplantation programs, long-term evaluation in selected pilot centers, and strengthening of perfusionist training and quality standards are key steps toward effective and sustainable implementation.

Keywords:
Conflict of Interest: No conflict of interest was declared by the author.
Financial Disclosure: The author declared that this study received no financial support.

References

1
Jochmans I, Moers C, Smits JM, Leuvenink HG, Treckmann J, Paul A, et al. Machine perfusion versus cold storage for the preservation of kidneys donated after cardiac death: a multicenter, randomized, controlled trial. Ann Surg. 2010;252(5):756-764.
2
Treckmann J, Moers C, Smits JM, Gallinat A, Maathuis MH, van Kasterop-Kutz M, et al. Machine perfusion versus cold storage for preservation of kidneys from expanded criteria donors after brain death. Transpl Int. 2011;24(6):548-554.
3
Jiao B, Liu S, Liu H, Cheng D, Cheng Y, Liu Y. Hypothermic machine perfusion reduces delayed graft function and improves one-year graft survival of kidneys from expanded criteria donors: a meta-analysis. PLoS One. 2013;8(12):e81826.
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Tang G, Zhang L, Xia L, Zhang J, Wei Z, Zhou R. Hypothermic oxygenated perfusion in liver transplantation: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials and matched studies. Int J Surg. 2024;110(1):464-477.
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Risbey CWG, Thomas C, Niu A, Liu K, Crawford M, Pulitano C. Hypothermic oxygenated machine perfusion for high-risk liver grafts for transplantation: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Artif Organs. 2024;48(10):1085-1099.
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Parente A, Tirotta F, Pini A, Eden J, Dondossola D, Manzia TM, et al. Machine perfusion techniques for liver transplantation - a meta-analysis of the first seven randomized-controlled trials. J Hepatol. 2023;79(5):1201-1213.
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Ozcanli E. Perfusion profession quality standards in Türkiye. Turk J Clin Cardiov Perfusion. 2024;2(3):65-73.
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Nasralla D, Coussios CC, Mergental H, Akhtar MZ, Butler AJ, Ceresa CDL, et al. A randomized trial of normothermic preservation in liver transplantation. Nature. 2018;557(7703):50-56.
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Liew B, Nasralla D, Iype S, Pollok JM, Davidson B, Raptis DA. Liver transplant outcomes after ex vivo machine perfusion: a meta-analysis. Br J Surg. 2021;108(12):1409-1416.
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Markmann JF, Abouljoud MS, Ghobrial RM, Bhati CS, Pelletier SJ, Lu AD, et al. Impact of portable normothermic blood-based machine perfusion on outcomes of liver transplant: the OCS liver PROTECT randomized clinical trial. JAMA Surg. 2022;157(3):189-198.