| Literature DB >> 32621775 |
Riccardo Pravisani1,2, Masaaki Hidaka1, Umberto Baccarani2, Shinichiro Ono1, Miriam Isola3, Tota Kugiyama1, Akihiko Soyama1, Tomohiko Adachi1, Takanobu Hara1, Takashi Hamada1, Florian Pecquenard1, Andrea Risaliti2, Susumu Eguchi1.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to investigate whether LT candidates with sarcopenia are at an increased risk of receiving an inappropriate standard liver volume (SLV) estimation by standard body weight (BW)-derived SLV formula. Non-BW-SLV estimation formulas were tested in 262 LDLT donors and compared to a standard BW-SLV formula. The anthropometric parameters used were the thoracic width (TW-SLV) and thoracoabdominal circumference (TAC-SLV). Subsequently, sarcopenic and non-sarcopenic LDLT candidates (total, 217 patients) were compared in terms of estimated BW-SLV (routine method) and non-BW-SLV. In donors, TW-SLV showed comparable concordance with CT scan measured total liver volume as BW-SLV. The performance of TAC-SLV was low. In recipients, the prevalence of pre-LT sarcopenia was 30.4%. Sarcopenic patients were attributed a significantly lower BW-SLV than non-sarcopenic (sarcopenia vs no-sarcopenia, 1063.8 ml [1004.1-1118.4] vs. 1220.7 ml [1115.0-1306.6], P < 0.001), despite comparable TW-SLV, age, body height, and gender prevalence. As a result, sarcopenic patients received a graft with a statistically lower weight at organ procurement and developed more frequently a small-for-size syndrome (SFSS) according to the Dahm et al. (27.7% vs. 6.8%, P < 0.01) and Kyushu (28.7% vs. 9.2%, P < 0.01) definition. Therefore, In sarcopenic patients, BW-SLV formulas are affected by an high risk of SLV underestimation, thus exposing them to an increased risk of post-LT SFSS.Entities:
Keywords: living-donor liver transplantation; sarcopenia; skeletal muscle mass index; small-for-size syndrome; standard liver volume; thoracic width
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32621775 DOI: 10.1111/tri.13690
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transpl Int ISSN: 0934-0874 Impact factor: 3.782