Literature DB >> 33187463

Outcome of Pediatric Liver Transplants in Patients With Less Than 10 kg of Body Weight Is Not Worse.

Yuktansh Pandey1, Sharat Varma, Bhargava Ram Chikkala, Rajgopal Acharya, Sapana Verma, Inbaraj Balradja, Dibyajyoti Das, Rajesh Dey, Shaleen Agarwal, Subhash Gupta.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Liver transplant in pediatric patients with body weight < 10 kg poses a challenge to the entire liver transplant team. Many reports have considered 10 kg to be a cutoff pointfor body weightforfavorable posttransplant outcomes. With evolving surgical techniques and postoperative management, there is potential to improve outcomes in this subset of recipients. We compared the outcomes in pediatric patients with body weight < 10 kg with those > 10 kg; also, we studied the factors of influence.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: We performed a retrospective analysis to evaluate the outcomes of liver transplants in pediatric patients with < 10 kg body weight. The cohort consisted of 90 children subdivided into the following 2 subgroups: group A (n = 35) with > 10 kg body weight at liver transplant and group B (n = 55) with < 10 kg body weight at liver transplant. We compared the following pretransplant characteristics between the groups: graft weight, graft-to-recipient weightratio, cold ischemia time, warm ischemia times, and liver transplant outcomes.
RESULTS: Pediatric End-stage Liver Disease score was significantly higher in group B (score of 24) versus group A (score of 18). Group B had significantly higher graft-to-recipient weight ratio (2.8 in group B vs 1.7 in group A). Graft function showed no significant difference between the 2 groups. Portal vein thrombosis was seen only in group B, whereas biliary leaks were observed among 5 patients in group B and 1 patientin group A. Patient survivalrate was higherin group B (86%) than in group A (77%).
CONCLUSIONS: Pediatric patients weighing < 10 kg have similarif not better survivalrates after liver transplant compared with patients > 10 kg. Advancements in surgical techniques and a careful monitoring for complications and timely intervention are important to facilitate these outcomes.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 33187463     DOI: 10.6002/ect.2020.0308

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Clin Transplant        ISSN: 1304-0855            Impact factor:   0.945


  1 in total

1.  Living Donor Liver Transplantation vs. Split Liver Transplantation Using Left Lateral Segment Grafts in Pediatric Recipients: An Analysis of the UNOS Database.

Authors:  Christina Dalzell; Paola A Vargas; Kyle Soltys; Frank Dipaola; George Mazariegos; Jose Oberholzer; Nicolas Goldaracena
Journal:  Transpl Int       Date:  2022-03-22       Impact factor: 3.782

  1 in total

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