| Literature DB >> 23227416 |
Vinaya C Maddukuri1, Courtney D Stephenson, Lon Eskind, William A Ahrens, Preston Purdum, Mark W Russo.
Abstract
Acute liver failure (ALF) during pregnancy is very uncommon. Pregnancy-specific liver conditions like hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets (HELLP) syndrome and acute fatty liver of pregnancy can cause ALF at term or postpartum, but, typically occur during the third trimester. Most of these patients recover spontaneously after delivery, but, on occasion, they require liver transplantation in the postpartum period. However, ALF during the first and second trimester of pregnancy requiring antepartum liver transplantation is rare. Only fifteen cases of liver transplantation during pregnancy have been reported, and very few occurred during the first trimester. We report a Woman who developed acute liver failure during the first trimester of pregnancy and underwent successful liver transplantation at 11-week gestation, followed by successful delivery of the fetus at 30 weeks. To our knowledge, this is the earliest case of successful liver transplantation during pregnancy followed by successful fetal outcome. We discuss management of the patient and fetus before, during, and after liver transplantation and review the literature on antepartum liver transplant in pregnancy.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23227416 PMCID: PMC3513828 DOI: 10.1155/2012/484080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Transplant ISSN: 2090-6951
Review of cases of liver transplantation during pregnancy.
| Reference | Diagnosis | Gestational age at transplant | Immunosuppression | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Morris et al. [ | Acute liver failure from drug induced liver injury | 27 weeks | Prednisone and cyclosporine | Successful deceased donor liver transplant and neonatal death |
| Laifer et al. [ | Fulminant Hepatitis B | 26 weeks | Prednisone and cyclosporine | Delivery by c section at 28 weeks and neonatal death |
| Fair et al. [ | 21 y/o woman with acute liver failure from Hepatitis B | 22 weeks gestation | Steroids, OKT3, and cyclosporine | Deceased donor liver transplant with primary malfunction, followed by successful retransplantation on postop day 2. C section at 30 weeks. Fetus survived and healthy. Fetus had IUGR and severe oligohydramnios |
| Moreno et al. [ | 32 y/o female with cryptogenic acute liver failure | 27 weeks | Methylprednisolone, cyclosporine, and azathioprine | Successful deceased donor liver transplantation Fetus survived. C-section at 39 weeks. Infant healthy at 11 months |
| Hamilton et al. [ | 20 y/o woman with acute liver failure from Hepatitis B | 18 weeks | n/a | Successful deceased donor liver transplantation. Fetal death on posttransplant day 5 |
| Finlay et al. [ | Acute liver failure | 17 weeks | n/a | Successful deceased donor liver transplantation. Fetal death at 22 weeks |
| Lo et al. [ | 25 y/o with cryptogenic acute liver failure | 26 weeks | n/a | Successful left lobe living donor liver transplantation. Spontaneous abortion posttransplant day 2 |
| Catnach et al. [ | 27 y/o woman with end stage autoimmune hepatitis | 20 weeks | Cyclosporine, prednisolone, and azathioprine | Successful deceased donor liver transplantation. Successful delivery at 28 weeks. Recipient developed CMV infection |
| Laifer et al. [ | 30 y/o female decompensated cirrhosis from autoimmune liver disease | 23 weeks | Tacrolimus and prednisone | Fetal death posttransplant day 6 |
| Eguchi et al. [ | 28 y/o woman with cryptogenic acute liver failure | 15 weeks | Prednisone and tacrolimus | Successful adult living donor liver transplant. Artificial abortion posttransplant day 31. Recipient developed CMV infection |
| Kato et al. [ | 31 y/o female with cryptogenic acute liver failure | 14 weeks | Methylprednisolone, tacrolimus, and 2 days of mycophenolate mofetil | Left lateral segment adult to adult living donor liver transplantation. Spontaneous abortion immediately after transplant |
| Jarufe et al. [ | 35 y/o female with cryptogenic acute liver failure | 22 weeks | Prednisone and tacrolimus | Successful deceased donor liver transplantation. Delivery at 27 weeks of gestation. Normal psychomotor development at 1-year followup |
| Jankovic et al. [ | 26 y/o female with cryptogenic familial biliary cirrhosis | 13.5 weeks | Tacrolimus, azathioprine, and prednisolone | Successful liver transplantation. Vaginal delivery at 36 weeks |
| Anders et al. [ | 18 y/o female with cryptogenic acute liver failure | 20 weeks | n/a | Successful liver transplantation. Fetal death 48 hours after transplantation |
| Sequeira et al. [ | 36 y/o female with drug induced acute liver failure due to propylthiouracil | 18 weeks | Tacrolimus, cyclosporine, and prednisolone | Successful liver transplantation. Elective cesarean section at 37 weeks. Child had IUGR, oligohydramnios, decreased cerebral volume, ventriculomegaly, microcephaly, seizures, and delayed developmental milestones |
| Current case | 29 y/o female with cryptogenic acute liver failure | 11 weeks | Tacrolimus and prednisone | Successful deceased donor liver transplantation. Healthy female fetus delivered at 30 weeks. Normal psychomotor development at 4-year followup |
Selected laboratory values.
| Day→ | Day 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 transplant | 9 | 10 | 16 discharge | Week 24 | Week 26 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lab↓ | |||||||||||||
| Creatinine (mg/dL) | 0.6 | 0.7 | 0.6 | 0.7 | 0.7 | 0.7 | 0.6 | 0.7 | 0.7 | 1.0 | 0.6 | 1.0 | 1.1 |
| Albumin (g/dL) | 2.2 | 2.6 | 2.2 | 2.4 | 2.4 | 2.3 | 2.3 | 2.5 | 2.6 | 2.9 | 2.5 | 3.1 | 3.1 |
| Total bilirubin (mg/dL) | 16.4 | 16.2 | 16.0 | 19.0 | 21.2 | 22.1 | 22.3 | 24.0 | 13 | 4.4 | 2.6 | 0.8 | 0.5 |
| Alkaline phosphatase (IU/L) | 105 | 116 | 112 | 143 | 152 | 176 | 166 | 172 | 98 | 63 | 56 | 152 | 152 |
| AST (IU/L) | 1001 | 757 | 684 | 729 | 733 | 637 | 580 | 567 | 808 | 370 | 38 | 29 | 30 |
| ALT (IU/L) | 1269 | 883 | 818 | 842 | 834 | 726 | 633 | 607 | 582 | 357 | 117 | 53 | 50 |
| INR (s) | 3.3 | 1.7* | 2.6 | 2.9 | 3.2 | 3.5 | 4 | 5 | 1.4 | 1.2 | |||
| GGT (IU/L) | 66 | 37 | 24 | 50 | 119 | 131 | |||||||
| Bile acids ( | 44 |
Figure 1(a) Transjugular biopsy-portal tract showing inflammation with bile ductular proliferation and interface hepatitis (arrows) (H&E 200x). (b) Transjugular biopsy-central vein (arrow) with pericentral hepatocyte dropout, ballooning degeneration, and hemorrhage (H&E 200x). (c) Explant showing architectural collapse (arrows) (H&E 40x). (d) Explant with interface between area of collapse and residual viable parenchyma (arrows) (H&E 100x). (e) Explant with portal/interface hepatitis (arrow). Periportal hepatocytes showing ballooning/cytoplasmic clearing (H&E 100x). (f) Reticulin stain highlights areas of collapse (arrow) adjacent to viable parenchyma.