Literature DB >> 31343109

Barriers to ideal outcomes after pediatric liver transplantation.

Vicky Lee Ng1, George V Mazariegos2, Beau Kelly3, Simon Horslen4, Sue V McDiarmid5, John C Magee6, Kathleen M Loomes7, Ryan T Fischer8, Shikha S Sundaram9, Jennifer C Lai10, Helen S Te11, John C Bucuvalas12.   

Abstract

Long-term survival for children who undergo LT is now the rule rather than the exception. However, a focus on the outcome of patient or graft survival rates alone provides an incomplete and limited view of life for patients who undergo LT as an infant, child, or teen. The paradigm has now appropriately shifted to opportunities focused on our overarching goals of "surviving and thriving" with long-term allograft health, freedom of complications from long-term immunosuppression, self-reported well-being, and global functional health. Experts within the liver transplant community highlight clinical gaps and potential barriers at each of the pretransplant, intra-operative, early-, medium-, and long-term post-transplant stages toward these broader mandates. Strategies including clinical research, innovation, and quality improvement targeting both traditional as well as PRO are outlined and, if successfully leveraged and conducted, would improve outcomes for recipients of pediatric LT.
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31343109     DOI: 10.1111/petr.13537

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Transplant        ISSN: 1397-3142


  4 in total

1.  Variability of Care and Access to Transplantation for Children with Biliary Atresia Who Need a Liver Replacement.

Authors:  Jean de Ville de Goyet; Toni Illhardt; Christophe Chardot; Peace N Dike; Ulrich Baumann; Katherine Brandt; Barbara E Wildhaber; Mikko Pakarinen; Fabrizio di Francesco; Ekkehard Sturm; Marianna Cornet; Caroline Lemoine; Eva Doreen Pfister; Ana M Calinescu; Maria Hukkinen; Sanjiv Harpavat; Fabio Tuzzolino; Riccardo Superina
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-04-12       Impact factor: 4.964

2.  Neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation is associated with worse patient and graft survival following pediatric liver transplantation.

Authors:  Sharad I Wadhwani; Andrew F Beck; John Bucuvalas; Laura Gottlieb; Uma Kotagal; Jennifer C Lai
Journal:  Am J Transplant       Date:  2020-02-06       Impact factor: 8.086

3.  Determinants of length of stay after pediatric liver transplantation.

Authors:  Karina Covarrubias; Xun Luo; Allan Massie; Kathleen B Schwarz; Jacqueline Garonzik-Wang; Dorry L Segev; Douglas B Mogul
Journal:  Pediatr Transplant       Date:  2020-03-25

4.  Center Variability in Acute Rejection and Biliary Complications After Pediatric Liver Transplantation.

Authors:  Mounika Kanneganti; Yuwen Xu; Yuan-Shung Huang; Eimear Kitt; Brian T Fisher; Peter L Abt; Elizabeth B Rand; Douglas E Schaubel; Therese Bittermann
Journal:  Liver Transpl       Date:  2021-08-25       Impact factor: 5.799

  4 in total

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