| Literature DB >> 31081572 |
Koji Umeshita1, Susumu Eguchi2, Hiroto Egawa3, Hironori Haga4, Mureo Kasahara5, Norihiro Kokudo6, Shotaro Sakisaka7, Yasutsugu Takada8, Eiji Tanaka9, Hidetoshi Eguchi1, Shinji Uemoto10, Hideki Ohdan11.
Abstract
As of 31 December 2017, a total of 9242 liver transplants have been carried out in 67 institutions in Japan. There were 447 deceased donor transplants (444 from heart-beating donors and 3 from non-heart-beating donors) and 8795 living-donor transplants. The annual total of liver transplants in 2017 was 416 (69 deceased donor transplants and 347 living-donor transplants). The most frequent indication was cholestatic disease, followed by neoplastic disease and hepatocellular disease. In terms of hepatocellular disease in 2017, cirrhosis due to hepatitis C and B decreased (13 and 8, respectively), whereas alcoholic cirrhosis markedly increased (32). Patient survival following transplantation from heart-beating donor (444 transplants: 1 year, 89.1%; 3 years, 85.2%; 5 years, 82.9%; 10 years, 75.4%; 15 years, 70.7%) was similar to that from living-donor (8794 transplants: 1 year, 85.0%; 3 years, 80.9%; 5 years, 78.5%; 10 years, 73.2%; 15 years, 68.5%; 20 years, 65.7%; 25 years, 64.6%). Graft survival was very much the same as patient survival (heart-beating donor: 1 year, 88.4%; 3 years, 84.5%; 5 years, 82.2%; 10 years, 74.7%; 15 years, 70.1%; living donor: 1 year, 84.3%; 3 years, 79.9%; 5 years, 77.3%; 10 years, 71.4%; 15 years, 66.3%; 20 years, 63.3%; 25 years, 61.9%). Survival data are reported according to age and sex of recipient, indication, age and sex of donor, ABO compatibility, and other factors.Entities:
Keywords: Japanese Liver Transplantation Society; deceased-donor liver transplantation; living-donor liver transplantation; prognosis; registry
Year: 2019 PMID: 31081572 DOI: 10.1111/hepr.13364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatol Res ISSN: 1386-6346 Impact factor: 4.288