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The impact of donor liver allograft fibrosis on patients undergoing liver transplantation

Authors :
Maria Isabel Fiel
Nir Lubezky
Thomas D. Schiano
Marcelo Facciuto
Matias Facciuto
Norifumi Harimoto
David M. Gonzalez
Vikram Wadhera
Ashley Stueck
Ilias P. Gomatos
Source :
Clinical transplantation. 32(3)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background The utilization of extended criteria liver allografts (ECD) shortens time to transplantation. Objective To characterize the effect of liver allograft fibrosis on graft and patient survival after liver transplantation (LT), with particular attention to fibrosis progression. Methods Retrospective database search of donor and recipient liver allograft histology of liver transplants performed between 2007 and 2011. Donor and patient characteristics were analyzed. Results One hundred and one patients underwent LT with donor liver allografts with early-stage fibrosis (stage 1 fibrosis and stage 2 fibrosis). The level of liver fibrosis did not progress in 40% of the patients tested, and there was a regression of fibrosis in 30%. At a median follow-up of 71 months, of 101 patients transplanted with fibrotic livers, 63 patients (63%) were alive with functioning initial grafts, six patients (6%) were retransplanted, and 35 patients expired. The graft survival rates were 82% and 69% at 1 and 5 years, respectively. Graft survival differences were not found to be statistically significant between the degrees of liver allograft fibrosis: 5-year graft survival (73% for stage 1 fibrosis and 62% for stage 2 fibrosis, P = .24). The entire fibrosis group was further compared with a control group of 208 consecutive primary liver transplant patients with allografts having no fibrosis. The 5-year graft survival was not significantly different between the groups (69% for the fibrosis group vs 75% for the nonfibrosis group, P = .19). Survival was also not statistically different between the groups (5-year survival of 73% for the fibrosis group vs 79% for the nonfibrosis group, P = .2). In patients with HCV, graft survival differences were not found to be statistically significant with the use of early-stage fibrotic livers: 5-year graft survival of 60% for fibrosis group vs 70% for the nonfibrosis group, P = .22). Conclusion This study demonstrates that allografts with early-stage fibrosis achieve acceptable long-term survival after liver transplantation. Given these preliminary results, the use of organs with early-stage fibrosis warrants further studies at a larger scale to validate these results.

Details

ISSN :
13990012
Volume :
32
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....988d5970787a42ce58d116e994605d0f