| Literature DB >> 24383021 |
Nina Kimmich1, Philipp Dutkowski2, Franziska Krähenmann1, Beat Müllhaupt3, Roland Zimmermann1, Nicole Ochsenbein-Kölble1.
Abstract
Acute hepatic failure during pregnancy is a life-threatening situation for the mother and fetus and might need a super-urgent liver transplantation. Many pregnancies with positive outcomes are reported after a previous liver transplantation before the pregnancy, but only a few of them are mentioned with transplantation during pregnancy. In these few cases, fetal outcome is mostly adverse. Experience with liver failure during pregnancy and its management is still deficient and needs to be approved. For sure, patients need to be treated in highly qualified centers in a multidisciplinary approach. We present a case of successful super-urgent liver transplantation during the second trimester of pregnancy after acute hepatic failure due to an acute hepatitis B infection with positive maternal and fetal outcome. Liver transplantation during pregnancy due to an acute liver failure can be a life-saving procedure for the mother and fetus. An early initiated maternal therapy with antiviral drugs and immunoglobulins seems to be safe and able to prevent fetal infection and immunosuppressive therapy after transplantation seems to be well tolerated. Nevertheless, fetal outcome differs widely and long-term outcome is deficiently known.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24383021 PMCID: PMC3872232 DOI: 10.1155/2013/356560
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Obstet Gynecol ISSN: 2090-6692
Maternal laboratory values.
| Day of admission, 22 0/7 GW | Day of transplantation, 22 3/7 GW | Two days after transplantation, 22 5/7 GW | Discharge of hospital (110 days after transplantation) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hb in g/L (117–153) | 111 | 83 | 64 | 133 |
| Tc in G/L (143–400) | 173 | 194 | 137 | 249 |
| INR (<1.2) | 1.6 | 4.6 | 1.2 | 1.1 |
| Factor 5 in % (50–150) | 27 | 15 | 79 | |
| Bilirubin in mcM/L (<21) | 129 | 184 | 37 | 7 |
| Ammoniac in mcM/L (9–30) | 17 | 49 | 14 | |
| AST in U/L (<35) | 4030 | 1749 | 347 | 20 |
| ALT in U/L (10–35) | 2775 | 2272 | 824 | 12 |
| GGT in U/L (5–36) | 19 | 17 | ||
| HBV-DNA IU/mL (0) | 117 × 106 | 110 × 106 | 6.2 × 106 | <20 |
| HBs-Ag in U/mL (<0.05) | pos | 2748.68 | 0 | |
| Anti-HBs U/L (<10) | neg | 17 | 787 | |
| HBe-Ag (neg) | pos | neg | ||
| Anti-HBe (neg) | pos | pos | ||
| Anti-HBc-IgM (neg) | pos | pos |
Figure 1Sonographic images.
Causes of acute hepatic failure during pregnancy.
| Causes of hepatic failure | Pregnancy related | Nonpregnancy related | Testing |
|---|---|---|---|
| HELLP syndrome | x | Thrombocytes, liver enzymes, hemolysis parameters (LDH, haptoglobin) | |
| Acute fatty liver of pregnancy | x | Long-chain fatty acids (LCHAD), acylcarnitine | |
| Infections | x | Serological blood testing | |
| Intoxications (drugs, medication) | x | Urine/blood testing (qualitative/quantitative drug proof) | |
| Metabolic disorders (e.g., M. Wilson) | x | Special markers (e.g., ceruloplasmin, alpha-1-antitrypsin), biopsy | |
| Tumors | x | Imaging, biopsy, tumor markers (e.g., AFP) | |
| Autoimmune disorders | x | Autoantibodies, biopsy |
Eighteen other cases of liver transplantation during pregnancy in the literature.
| Publication | GW at transplantation | Etiology | Maternal outcome | Delivery mode, GW | Fetal outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anders et al. [ | 20 | Unknown | Survived | Curettage, 20 GW | Intrauterine fetal death (IUFD) |
| Catnach et al. [ | 20 | Autoimmune | Survived, PPROM | Spontaneous, 28 GW | Survived |
| Eguchi et al. [ | 15 | Unknown | Survived, cytomegaly infection | Curettage, 20 GW | Abortion |
| Fair et al. [ | 22 | Hepatitis B | Survived, Retransplantation | Cesarean, 30 GW | Survived, intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) |
| Finlay et al. [ | 17.5 | Unknown | Survived | Spontaneous, 28.5 GW | IUFD |
| Hamilton et al. [ | 21 | Hepatitis B | Survived | Spontaneous, 22 GW | IUFD |
| Jarufe et al. [ | 22 | Unknown | Survived, reoperation (biliary stenosis), mild graft reaction, preterm contractions | Spontaneous, 27 GW | Survived, no compromises |
| Laifer et al. [ | 26 | Hepatitis B | Survived, Retransplantation | Cesarean, 28 GW | Neonatal death |
| Laifer et al. [ | 23 | Autoimmune | Survived; infection, renal insufficiency, anemia, thrombozytopenia, hypotension graft reaction | Spontaneous, 23 GW | IUFD |
| Lo et al. [ | 26 | Unknown | Survived | Spontaneous, 26 GW | IUFD 26 |
| Kato et al. [ | 13 | Unknown | Survived, reoperation (insufficient biliary anastomosis) | Miscarriage, 13 GW | Miscarriage |
| Moreno et al. [ | 27 | Unknown | Survived | Cesarean, term | Survived |
| Morris et al. [ | 27 | Drug (PTU) | Survived | Spontaneous, 27 GW | Neonatal death |
| Sequeira et al. [ | 18 | Drug (PTU) | Survived | Cesarean, 37 GW | IUGR, microcephaly, oligohydramnion, ventriculomegaly, ischemic enzephalopathy, seizures |
| Jankovic et al. [ | 13.5 | Autoimmune | Survived | Spontaneous, 36 GW | No compromises |
| Maddukuri et al. [ | 11 | Unknown | Survived | Spontaneous, 30 GW | Normally developed at age of 4 years |
| Simsek et al. [ | 18 | Hepatitis A | Survived | Induced abortion 18 GW | Abortion, growth restriction, oligohydramnion |
|
Thornton and Minns [ | 20 5/7 | Drug | Survived | Induced abortion | Abortion, hydrops, bilateral ventriculomegaly |