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The impact of preexisting and post-transplant diabetes mellitus on outcomes following liver transplantation

Authors :
Aravinthan, Aloysious D
Fateen, Waleed
Doyle, Adam C
Venkatachalapathy, Suresh V
Issachar, Assaf
Galvin, Zita
Sapisochin, Gonzalo
Cattral, Mark S
Ghanekar, Anand
Mcgilvray, Ian D
Selzner, Markus
Grant, David R
Greig, Paul D
Selzner, Nazia
Lilly, Leslie B
Renner, Eberhard L
Bhat, Mamatha
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins, 2019.

Abstract

Background: Diabetes mellitus (DM) is said to adversely affect transplant outcomes. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of pre-existing and post-transplant DM on liver transplant (LT) recipients.Method: A single centre retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data of LT recipients (1990–2015) was undertaken.Results: Of the 2,209 patients, 13% (n=298) had Pre-DM, 16% (n=362) developed PTDM, 5% (n=118) developed transient hyperglycemia (t-HG) post-LT, and 65% (n=1,431) never developed DM (no DM). Baseline clinical characteristics of patients with PTDM was similar to that of patients with pre-DM. Incidence of PTDM peaked during first-year (87%) and plateaued thereafter. On multivariate analysis (Bonferroni-corrected), non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and the use of Tacrolimus and Sirolimus use were independently associated with PTDM development. Both Pre-DM and PTDM patients had satisfactory and comparable glycaemic control throughout the follow-up period. Those who developed t-HG seems to have a unique characteristic compared to others. Overall, 9%, 5%, and 8% developed end-stage renal disease (ESRD), major cardiovascular event (mCVE), and de novo cancer, respectively. Both Pre-DM and PTDM did not adversely affect patient survival, re-LT, or de novo cancer. The risks of ESRD and mCVE were significantly higher in patients with Pre-DM followed by PTDM and no DM.Conclusions: In this largest non-registry study, patients with pre-DM and PTDM share similar baseline clinical characteristics. Pre-DM increases the risk of ESRD and mCVE; however, patient survival was comparable to those with PTDM and without diabetes. Understanding the impact of PTDM would need prolonged follow-up.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00411337
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....12a2b892de474e876fac8320dc698c8e