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Incidental findings during donor liver assessment: Single center experience.

Authors :
González, Iván A.
Saeed, Omer
Mustafa, Mohamed
Segura, Sheila E.
Collins, Katrina
Hou, Tieying
Mesa, Hector
Lee, Sun M.
Zhang, Dongwei
Lin, Jingmei
Cummings, Oscar W.
Source :
Annals of Diagnostic Pathology; Apr2024, Vol. 69, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Intraoperative consultation of donor liver is an important part of transplant evaluation and determination of liver eligibility. In this study, we describe incidental pathologic findings discovered during the pretransplant evaluation of liver donors in our Institution from 1/2010 to 12/2022. During this 13-year period 369 intraoperative consultations from 262 liver donors were performed. Of those cases, incidental findings were identified in 22 cases (5.9 %) from 19 donors (7.3 %); two donors had more than one lesion. The median age of this subset of patients was 53 years (range: 18–70) and females predominated (63 %). Sixteen of the donors had abnormal findings in the liver: 6 bile duct hamartoma (BDH), 5 hyalinized nodule with Histoplasma capsulatum , 5 focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH), 2 bile duct adenomas (BDA), 1 biliary cyst and 1 hemangioma. One donor had both FNH and a BDH. One BDH and 1 BDA case was misdiagnosed as malignancy during the frozen section evaluation. Three donors had extrahepatic pathologies: a pancreatic tail schwannoma, a low-grade appendiceal mucinous neoplasm, and a lymph node with metastatic endometrial endometrioid adenocarcinoma. Of the 19 livers, the final organ disposition was available for 9: 6 were transplanted (67 %) and 3 were discarded (33 %). Two of the 3 discarded organs were misdiagnosed BDH and BDA cases, and one was incorrectly reported as having 90 % microvesicular steatosis during the frozen assessment. We present the clinicopathologic characteristics of liver donors with incidental findings during the pre-transplant evaluation which could lead to unwarranted graft dismissal if misdiagnosed. Additionally, incidental fungal infections can have implications for immunosuppressive therapy and the decision to use or reject the graft. • The incidental findings during donor liver assessment have not been described to date. • In 5.9 % of cases (22 of 369 cases) an incidental finding was found. • The most common incidental finding was a bile duct hamartoma. • Other common lesions included: FNH and hyalinized nodules with Histoplasma capsulatum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10929134
Volume :
69
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Annals of Diagnostic Pathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175453693
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anndiagpath.2024.152266