The advantages of living donor pancreas transplants for the recipient include good HLA matching, lower immunologic risk, less
immunosuppression, lower risk of infection and of posttransplant malignancies, and shorter pancreas graft preservation time.
In 2008, a total of 155 segmental pancreas transplants using living donors were reported to the International Pancreas Transplant
Registry from six countries. Pancreas living donors need to undergo a thorough pretransplant endocrinologic workup in order
to minimize the risk of metabolic complications. The pretransplant workup has evolved over time, after initial reports showed
that up to 25% of living donors had elevated hemoglobin A1c levels after donation. Avoiding obesity after donation diminishes the risk of long-term metabolic complications. The risk
of surgical complications for the donor (such as pancreatitis, pancreatic leak or fistula, pancreatic abscess, and pancreatic
pseudocyst) is less than 5%. If both the donor and recipient operations are technically successful, the long-term graft survival
rate is significantly higher for living (versus deceased) donor pancreas transplant recipients. Future long-term studies of
metabolic function in living donors are warranted to determine whether living donor pancreas transplants can safely be applied
more widely and whether living donors can be used for islet transplants.
Keywords Pancreas transplantation - Living donors - Metabolic complications - Metabolic workup