| Literature DB >> 22007310 |
Vibha Varma1, Naimish Mehta, Vinay Kumaran, Samiran Nundy.
Abstract
Patients with chronic liver disease and certain patients with acute liver failure require liver transplantation as a life-saving measure. Liver transplantation has undergone major improvements, with better selection of candidates for transplantation and allocation of scarce deceased donor organs (according to more objective criteria). Living donor liver transplantation came into existence to overcome the shortage of donor organs especially in countries where there was virtually no deceased donor programme. Advances in the technical aspects of the procedure, the intraoperative and postoperative care of both recipients and donors, coupled with the introduction of better immunosuppression protocols, have led to graft and patient survivals of over 90% in most high volume centres. Controversial areas like transplantation in alcoholic liver disease without abstinence, acute alcoholic hepatitis, and retransplantation for recurrent hepatitis C virus infection require continuing discussion.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22007310 PMCID: PMC3189562 DOI: 10.4061/2011/121862
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hepatol
United network for organ-sharing (UNOS) liver status classification.
| Status 1 | Fulminant liver failure with life expectancy <7 days |
| (i) Fulminant hepatic failure as traditionally defined | |
| (ii) Primary graft nonfunction <7 days of transplantation | |
| (iii) Hepatic artery thrombosis <7 days of transplantation | |
| (iv) Acute decompensated Wilson's disease | |
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| Status 2a | Hospitalized in ICU for chronic liver failure with life expectancy <7 days, with a Child-Pugh score of ≥10 and one of the following: |
| (i) unresponsive active variceal hemorrhage | |
| (ii) hepatorenal syndrome | |
| (iii) refractory ascites/hepatic hydrothorax, | |
| (iv) Stage 3 or 4 hepatic encephalopathy | |
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| Status 2B | Requiring continuous medical care, with a Child-Pugh score of ≥10, or a Child-Pugh score ≥7 and one of the following: |
| (i) unresponsive active variceal hemorrhage | |
| (ii) hepatorenal syndrome | |
| (iii) spontaneous bacterial peritonitis | |
| (iv) refractory ascites/hepatic hydrothorax, | |
| or presence of hepatocellular carcinoma | |
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| Status 3 | Requiring continuous medical care, with a Child-Pugh score of ≥7, but not meeting criteria for Status 2B |
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| Status 7 | Temporary inactive |
From http://www.unos.org/ initially implemented in July 1997 later modified in January 1998 and August 1998.
Indications for liver transplantation.
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| Hepatitis A, acetaminophen, autoimmune hepatitis |
| Hepatitis B |
| Hepatitis C, cryptogenic |
| Drugs, hepatitis D |
| Wilson's disease, Budd-Chiari syndrome |
| Fatty infiltration—acute fatty liver of pregnancy, Reye's syndrome |
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| Chronic hepatitis B virus infection |
| Chronic hepatitis C virus infection |
| Alcoholic liver disease |
| Autoimmune hepatitis |
| Cryptogenic liver disease |
| Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease |
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| Hepatocellular carcinoma |
| Carcinoid tumor |
| Islet cell tumor |
| Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma |
| Cholangiocarcinoma |
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| Wilson's disease |
| Hereditary hemochromatosis |
| Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency |
| Glycogen storage disease |
| Cystic fibrosis |
| Glycogen storage disease I and IV |
| Crigler-Najjar syndrome |
| Galactosemia |
| Type 1 hyperoxaluria |
| Familial homozygous hypercholesterolemia |
| Hemophilia A and B |
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| Budd-Chiari syndrome |
| Veno-occlusive disease |
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| Primary biliary cirrhosis |
| Primary sclerosing cholangitis |
| Secondary biliary cirrhosis |
| Biliary atresia |
| Alagille syndrome |
| Byler's disease |
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| Adult polycystic liver disease |
| Nodular regenerative hyperplasia |
| Caroli's disease |
| Severe graft-versus-host disease |
| Amyloidosis |
| Sarcoidosis |
| Hepatic trauma |
Variant syndromes requiring liver transplantation.
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| Diuretic resistant, Nonresponsive to TIPS or, TIPS |
| contraindicated |
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| Shunt fraction >8%, pulmonary vascular dilatation |
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UK blood and transplant criteria for registration as a super-urgent transplant.
| Paracetamol poisoning | |
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| Category 1 | pH < 7.25 more than 24 hours after overdose and fluid resuscitation |
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| Category 2 | Coexisting prothrombin time >100 s or INR > 6.5 and serum creatinine >300 |
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| Category 3 | Serum Lactate >24 hours after overdose > 3.5 mmol/L on admission or >3 mmol/L after fluid resuscitation |
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| Category 4 | Two of the three criteria from category 2 with clinical evidence of deterioration (e.g. increased ICP, Fi02 > 50%, increasing inotrope requirement) in the absence of clinical sepsis |
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| Seronegative hepatitis, hepatitis A, B, or an idiosyncratic drug | |
| reaction | |
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| Category 5 | Prothrombin time >100 s or INR > 6.5, and any grade of encephalopathy |
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| Category 6 | Any grade of encephalopathy, and any three from the following: unfavourable aetiology (idiosyncratic drug reaction, seronegative hepatitis), age > 40 years jaundice encephalopathy interval >7 days, serum bilirubin >300 |
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| Category 7 | Acute presentation of Wilson's disease, or Budd-Chiari syndrome. A combination of coagulopathy, and any grade of encephalopathy |
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| Category 8 | Hepatic artery thrombosis on days 0 to 21 days after liver transplantation |
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| Category 9 | Early graft dysfunction on days 0 to 7 after liver transplantation with at least 2 of the following: AST > 10,000 IU/L, INR > 3.0, serum lactate > 3 mmol/L, absence of bile production |
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| Category 10 | Any patient who has been a live donor who develops severe liver failure within 4 weeks of the donor operation |
Contraindications to liver transplantation.
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| Severe cardiopulmonary disease |
| Extrahepatic malignancy (oncologic criteria for cure not met) |
| Active alcohol/substance abuse |
| Acute alcoholic hepatitis |
| Active infection/uncontrolled sepsis |
| Lack of psychosocial support/inability to comply with medical |
| treatment |
| Brain death |
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| Advanced age |
| Acquired immune deficiency syndrome |
| Cholangiocarcinoma |
| Diffuse portal vein thrombosis |
(a) King's College Criteria
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| (1) Arterial pH < 7.3 | (1) INR > 6.5 (PT > 100 sec), |
| OR | OR any 3 of the following: |
| (1) PT > 100 sec | (1) INR > 3.5 (PT > 50 sec) |
| (2) Serum creatinine >3.4 mg/dL | (2) Age < 10 or >40 years |
| (3) Stage 3 or 4 encephalopathy | (3) Serum bilirubin >18 mg/dL |
| (4) Jaundice to encephalopathy interval >7 days | |
| (5) Non-A, non-B hepatitis, idiosyncratic drug reaction |
(b) Prognostic index in fulminant Wilsons hepatitis (WPI) [14]
| Score | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
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| Serum bilirubin (reference range 3–20 mmol/L) | <100 | 100–150 | 151–200 | 201–300 | >300 |
| Serum aspartate transaminase (reference range 7–40 IU/L) | <100 | 100–150 | 151–200 | 201–300 | >300 |
| Prothrombin time prolongation (seconds) | <4 | 4–8 | 9–12 | 13–20 | >30 |
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(c) Revised Wilson prognostic index (RWPI) [15]
| Score | Bilirubin ( | INR | AST (IU/L) | WCC (109/L) | Albumin (g/L) |
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| 0 | 0–100 | 0–1.29 | 0–100 | 0–6.7 | >45 |
| 1 | 101–150 | 1.3–1.6 | 101–150 | 6.8–8.3 | 34–44 |
| 2 | 151–200 | 1.7–1.9 | 151–300 | 8.4–10.3 | 25–33 |
| 3 | 201–300 | 2.0–2.4 | 301–400 | 10.4–15.3 | 21–24 |
| 4 | ≥301 | >2.5 | >401 | >15.4 | <20 |
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(d) Clichy criteria (Hospital Paul-Brousse, Villejuif [16])
| Hepatic encephalopathy, and factor V level: |
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| <20% in patients <30 years of age, or |
| <30% in patients ≥30 years of age |