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Liver transplantation for acute liver failure – a 30-year single center experience

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posted on 2018-05-31, 04:25 authored by Carl Sars, Marie Tranäng, Bo-Göran Ericzon, Erik Berglund

Objective: To determine overall long-term patient and graft survival rates among the recipients liver transplanted due to acute liver failure (ALF). Secondary aims included assessment of whether diagnosis, donor-recipient blood group compatibility and time-era of transplantation affected the outcome, and whether prescription-free availability of acetaminophen increased the need for liver transplantation (LTx).

Materials and Methods: A Retrospective cohort study of 78 patients who underwent LTx for ALF at Karolinska University Hospital 1984–2014. Patients were divided into two cohorts according to two 15-year periods: early cohort transplanted 1984–1999 (n = 40) and late cohort transplanted 2000–2014 (n = 38). Survival rates were established using Kaplan-Meier analyses.

Results: ALF patient survival rates for 1-year, 5-years, 10-years and 20-years were 71%, 63%, 52% and 40%, respectively. Survival for the late cohort at 1, 5 and 10 years was 82%, 76% and 71%, respectively. A high early mortality rate was noted during the first three months after transplantation when compared to LTx patients with chronic disease. Long-term survival rates were comparable between patients with ALF and chronic liver disease. Prescription-free access to acetaminophen did not increase the need for LTx. There was a strong trend towards improved survival in blood group identical donor-recipient pairs and blood group O recipients may have benefitted from this.

Conclusions: The high early mortality rate most likely reflects the critical pre-transplant condition in these patients and the urgent need to sometimes accept a marginal donor liver. Long-term survival improved significantly over time and variation in patient access to acetaminophen did not influence the rate of LTx in our region.

Funding

The study was supported by Emil and Vera Cornell’s Foundation, Stig and Gunborg Westman’s Foundation, The Foundation Blanceflor Boncompagni Ludovisi née Bildt, the Hirsch Fellowship for Surgeons, Erik and Edith Fernström’s Foundation for Medical Research, Karolinska Institutet Research Foundations, and the Swedish Society of Medicine.

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    Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology

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