| Literature DB >> 27653736 |
Salvatore Gruttadauria1, Duilio Pagano1, Ioannis Petridis2, Sergio Li Petri1, Alessandro Tropea1, Giovanni B Vizzini1, Angelo Luca3, Bruno G Gridelli1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND In healthy individuals, such as liver living donors, potential complications may occur during surgery. Reporting such complications and near-miss events is mandatory to improve living donor management and safety. MATERIAL AND METHODS This retrospective study was performed on a prospective database with the aim of providing a brief analysis of the perioperative, medium-term, and long-term complications, and the near-miss events in a single center series of 100 consecutive liver resections for adult-to-adult living-donor liver transplantation. RESULTS Only 23.3% of potential living donors underwent surgery. No living donor mortality was reported; 29 patients (29%) experienced at least one complication. Five patients developed mild long-term dysfunction; two aborted hepatectomies, and there were two near-miss events reported. CONCLUSIONS A strategy for an accurate assessment of living donor complications and strict selection criterion cannot be overemphasized, as well as the need to continuously update center patient outcome reports.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27653736 DOI: 10.12659/aot.899662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Transplant ISSN: 1425-9524 Impact factor: 1.530