Literature DB >> 15919444

Immunosuppression withdrawal after auxiliary liver transplantation for acute liver failure.

R Girlanda1, H Vilca-Melendez, P Srinivasan, P Muiesan, J G O'Grady, M Rela, N D Heaton.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The potential for immunosuppression withdrawal is the rationale for auxiliary liver transplantation (AUX) in patients with acute liver failure (ALF). PATIENTS AND METHODS: Forty-four AUX were performed in 28 adults and 16 children with ALF secondary to seronegative hepatitis (n = 20; 45%), paracetamol hepatotoxicity (n = 14; 32%), acute viral hepatitis (hepatitis B virus [HBV] n = 3, Epstein-Barr virus n = 1; 9%), drug-induced hepatitis (n = 3; 7%), autoimmune hepatitis (n = 2; 5%), and mushroom poisoning (n = 1; 2%). All patients fulfilled the King's College Hospital transplant criteria for ALF. After partial hepatectomy, 38 patients received a segmental auxiliary graft and six, a whole auxiliary graft. Immunosuppression was based on calcineurin inhibitors and steroids.
RESULTS: Thirty-four patients (77%) are alive after a median follow-up of 30 months (range 4 to 124). Eight adults and two children died of sepsis (n = 6; 14%) at a median interval of 30 days (range 2 to 66), intraoperative cardiac failure (n = 1), brain edema on postoperative day 8 (n = 1), sudden death on day 35 (n = 1), and multiple organ failure associated with HBV recurrence 4 years after transplantation (n = 1). Three patients underwent retransplantation for small-for-size graft syndrome with sepsis on postoperative day 15 (n = 1) and for ductopenic rejection 4 and 15 months after AUX (n = 2). In 10/31 (32%) survivors (6/18 adults and 4/13 children) immunosuppression was completely withdrawn after a median of 19 months.
CONCLUSION: Complete immunosuppression withdrawal can be achieved in a significant proportion of patients after AUX for ALF.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15919444     DOI: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2005.03.141

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transplant Proc        ISSN: 0041-1345            Impact factor:   1.066


  3 in total

1.  Subtotal hepatectomy and whole graft auxiliary transplantation for acetaminophen-associated acute liver failure.

Authors:  Ibrahim Rajput; K Rajendra Prasad; Mark C Bellamy; Mervyn Davies; Magdy S Attia; J Peter A Lodge
Journal:  HPB (Oxford)       Date:  2013-07-22       Impact factor: 3.647

Review 2.  Indian National Association for the Study of the Liver Consensus Statement on Acute Liver Failure (Part 1): Epidemiology, Pathogenesis, Presentation and Prognosis.

Authors:  Anil C Anand; Bhaskar Nandi; Subrat K Acharya; Anil Arora; Sethu Babu; Yogesh Batra; Yogesh K Chawla; Abhijit Chowdhury; Ashok Chaoudhuri; Eapen C Eapen; Harshad Devarbhavi; RadhaKrishan Dhiman; Siddhartha Datta Gupta; Ajay Duseja; Dinesh Jothimani; Dharmesh Kapoor; Premashish Kar; Mohamad S Khuroo; Ashish Kumar; Kaushal Madan; Bipadabhanjan Mallick; Rakhi Maiwall; Neelam Mohan; Aabha Nagral; Preetam Nath; Sarat C Panigrahi; Ankush Pawar; Cyriac A Philips; Dibyalochan Prahraj; Pankaj Puri; Amit Rastogi; Vivek A Saraswat; Sanjiv Saigal; Akash Shukla; Shivaram P Singh; Thomas Verghese; Manav Wadhawan
Journal:  J Clin Exp Hepatol       Date:  2020-04-28

Review 3.  Acute liver failure.

Authors:  Sanjay Bansal; Anil Dhawan
Journal:  Indian J Pediatr       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 1.967

  3 in total

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