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Importance of liver biopsy findings in immunosuppression management: Biopsy monitoring and working criteria for patients with operational tolerance (OT)

Authors :
Petrovic, Lydia
Alexander, Graeme
Baiocchi, Leonardo
Balasubramanian, Manjula
Batal, Ibrahim
Bellamy, Chris O. C.
Bhan, Atul
Bridges, Nancy
Bucuvalas, John
Charlotte, Frederic
Colvin, Bob
Czaja, Albert
Demetris, Anthony
DeVera, Michael
El-Monayeri, Magda S.
Feng, Sandy
Ferrell, Linda
Fiel, Maria Isabel
Fontes, Paulo
Fung, John
Haga, Hironori
Hart, John
Honsova, Eva
Hubscher, Stefan
Wesam, Ismail
Itoh, Tomoo
Jhala, Nirag
Jungmann, Patricia
Khettry, Urmila
Koshiba, Takaaki
Lassman, Charles
Lerut, Jan
Ligato, Saverio
Lunz, John
Mazariegos, George
McCaughan, Geoff
McClelland, Sandra A.
Minervini, Marta I.
Misdraji, Joseph
Mohanakumar, Thalachallour
Molne, Johan
Musat, Alexandru
Nalesnik, Michael
Nasser, Imad
Neil, Desley
Pappo, Orit
Randhawa, Parmjeet
Reinholt, Finn P.
Rubin, Erin
Ruiz, Phil
Sanchez Fueyo, Alberto
Sasatomi, Eizaburo
Schiano, Thomas
Sebagh, Mylene
Shaked, Avi
Sharkey, Francis Edward
Shimizu, Tomokazu
Sis, Banu
Smith, Maxwell
Sonzogni, Aurelio
Tchao, Nadia
Thung, Swan
Tisone, Giuseppe
Tsamandas, Athanassios
Wernerson, Annika
Wu, Tong
YILMAZ BARBET, FUNDA
Neuberger, James
SAĞOL, ÖZGÜL
Adeyi, Oyedele
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
WB Saunders, 2012.

Abstract

Obstacles to morbidity-free long-term survival after liver transplantation (LT) include complications of immunosuppression (IS), recurrence of the original disease and malignancies, and unexplained chronic hepatitis and graft fibrosis. Many programs attempt to minimize chronic exposure to IS by reducing dosages and stopping steroids. A few programs have successfully weaned a highly select group of recipients from all IS without apparent adverse consequences, but long-term follow-up is limited. Patients subjected to adjustments in IS are usually followed by serial liver chemistry tests, which are relatively insensitive methods for detecting allograft damage. Protocol biopsy has largely been abandoned for hepatitis C virusnegative recipients, at least in part because of the inability to integrate routine histopathological findings into a rational clinical management algorithm. Recognizing a need to more precisely categorize and determine the clinical significance of findings in long-term biopsy samples, the Banff Working Group on Liver Allograft Pathology has reviewed the literature, pooled the experience of its members, and proposed working definitions for biopsy changes that (1) are conducive to lowering IS and are compatible with operational tolerance (OT) and (2) raise concern for closer follow-up and perhaps increased IS during or after IS weaning. The establishment of guidelines should help us to standardize analyses of the effects of various treatments and/or weaning protocols and more rigorously categorize patients who are assumed to show OT. Long-term follow-up using standardized criteria will help us to determine the consequences of lowering IS and to define and determine the incidence and robustness of OT in liver allografts. Liver Transpl 18:1154-1170, 2012. (c) 2012 AASLD.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e69e303b3e900570946be834ea74f310