The Cleveland Clinic FACES Score: A Preliminary Assessment Tool for Identifying the Optimal Face Transplant Candidate

被引:38
作者
Gordon, Chad R. [1 ]
Siemionow, Maria [1 ]
Coffman, Kathy [2 ]
Alam, Daniel [3 ]
Eghtesad, Bijan [4 ]
Zins, James E. [1 ]
Bernard, Steven [1 ]
Fung, John [4 ]
Pryor, Landon [1 ]
Papay, Francis [1 ]
机构
[1] Cleveland Clin, Dept Plast Surg, Cleveland, OH 44195 USA
[2] Cleveland Clin, Dept Transplant Psychiat, Cleveland, OH 44195 USA
[3] Cleveland Clin, Dept Head Neck Surg, Cleveland, OH 44195 USA
[4] Cleveland Clin, Dept Transplant Surg, Cleveland, OH 44195 USA
关键词
FACES score; face transplant; candidate selection; facial allograft; candidate registry; inclusion criteria; exclusion criteria; composite tissue allograft; composite tissue transplantation; FACIAL ALLOGRAFT TRANSPLANTATION; COMPOSITE TISSUE ALLOTRANSPLANTATION; LIVER; HUMANS; CADAVER; MODEL; HOMOTRANSPLANTATION; HEAD;
D O I
10.1097/SCS.0b013e3181bd2c86
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
In lieu of limited resources, our multidisciplinary face transplant team requires a preliminary, Supplemental objective grading scheme for identifying the optimal face transplant candidate. Therefore, our objective was to develop all effective method for evaluating "facial deficit," which could also be used in the future for the allocation of limited facial organs, analogous to liver transplantation. Each candidate is screened using our institutional review board-approved protocol's current inclusion/exclusion criteria. Five categories were conceptualized to be of significance in evaluating patients in pursuit of facial allotransplantation as per our recent experience, as determined by the face transplant team. All patients with unfavorable characteristics such as evidence of poor medical compliance, an unsatisfactory psychosocial evaluation by Our team's transplant psychiatrist, and/or end-stage organ disease suggestive of significant comorbidity were excluded. This study resulted in a reproducible scoring system allowing our team the unprecedented ability to stratify facial deficit ill a standardized fashion. The FACES scores ranged from 10 (minimum) to 60 (maximum). Besides being used as a supplemental prescreening and/or postscreening tool, the FACES score has also provided all unprecedented framework for establishing a face transplant candidate registry within our institution, with the optimal recipients receiving the highest of scores. This FACES score objectively stratifies face transplant candidates for their facial deficit during multiple steps throughout the screening process and affords our institution the means of creating a registry. If substantiated, this supplemental score may ultimately predict successful outcomes, determine optimal utility, and provide insight toward prognosis with respect to facial composite tissue allotransplantation.
引用
收藏
页码:1969 / 1974
页数:6
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