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Fast-Track Liver Transplantation: Six-year Prospective Cohort Study with an Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) Protocol

Authors :
Patricio Más-Serrano
Jose Navarro-Martinez
María Díaz-Cuevas
Mariano Franco-Campello
Paola Melgar-Requena
Félix Lluís-Casajuana
Francisco A. Jaime-Sánchez
Maria Rodriguez-Soler
Luis Gómez-Salinas
Pablo Bellot-García
José M. Palazón-Azorín
Francisco Martínez-Adsuar
Cayetano F. Miralles-Maciá
Celia Villodre-Tudela
Miguel Perdiguero-Gil
José Manuel Ramia-Angel
Sonia Pascual-Bartolomé
G. Rodriguez-Laiz
Cándido Alcázar-López
José Such-Ronda
Source :
World Journal of Surgery
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Introduction Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) has been shown to facilitate discharge, decrease length of stay, improve outcomes and reduce costs. We used this concept to design a comprehensive fast-track pathway (OR-to-discharge) before starting our liver transplant activity and then applied this protocol prospectively to every patient undergoing liver transplantation at our institution, monitoring the results periodically. We now report our first six years results. Patients and methods Prospective cohort study of all the liver transplants performed at our institution for the first six years. Balanced general anesthesia, fluid restriction, thromboelastometry, inferior vena cava preservation and temporary portocaval shunt were strategies common to all cases. Standard immunosuppression administered included steroids, tacrolimus (delayed in the setting of renal impairment, with basiliximab induction added) and mycophenolate mofetil. Tacrolimus dosing was adjusted using a Bayesian estimation methodology. Oral intake and ambulation were started early. Results A total of 240 transplants were performed in 236 patients (191♂/45♀) over 74 months, mean age 56.3±9.6 years, raw MELD score 15.5±7.7. Predominant etiologies were alcohol (n = 136) and HCV (n = 82), with hepatocellular carcinoma present in 129 (54.7%). Nine patients received combined liver and kidney transplants. The mean operating time was 315±64 min with cold ischemia times of 279±88 min. Thirty-one patients (13.1%) were transfused in the OR (2.4±1.2 units of PRBC). Extubation was immediate (p=0.015) in the fast-track group. Patient survival was 86.8% at 1 year and 78.6% at five years. Conclusion Fast-Tracking of Liver Transplant patients is feasible and can be applied as the standard of care

Details

ISSN :
14322323 and 03642313
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
World Journal of Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5d328ff5aa93a0345588bd5e86805e11
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00268-021-05963-2