| Literature DB >> 34239278 |
Sushrut Trakroo1, Nakul Bhardwaj2, Rajat Garg2, Jamak Modaresi Esfeh3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With increasing rates of liver transplantation and a stagnant donor pool, the annual wait list removals have remained high. Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) is an established modality in expanding the donor pool and is the primary method of liver donation in large parts of the world. Marginal living donors, including those with hepatic steatosis, have been used to expand the donor pool. However, due to negative effects of steatosis on graft and recipient outcomes, current practice excludes overweight or obese donors with more than 10% macro vesicular steatosis. This has limited a potentially important source to help expand the donor pool. Weight loss is known to improve or resolve steatosis and rapid weight loss with short-term interventions have been used to convert marginal donors to low-risk donors in a small series of studies. There is, however, a lack of a consensus driven standardized approach to such interventions. AIM: To assess the available data on using weight loss interventions in potential living liver donors with steatotic livers and investigated the feasibility, efficacy, and safety of using such donors on the donor, graft and recipient outcomes. The principal objective was to assess if using such treated donor livers, could help expand the donor pool.Entities:
Keywords: Donor outcomes; Liver steatosis; Living donor liver transplant; Living liver donors; Recipient outcomes; Weight loss interventions
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34239278 PMCID: PMC8240053 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v27.i24.3682
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Overview of interventions used for body mass index and steatosis reduction, and donor, recipient and graft outcomes following liver transplantation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1 | Fujii | 8 | < 1600 Kcal/d + exercise 20 min x 3/wk ± statins | Median of 58 d | Yes ( | Yes ( | 8 | No significant difference from controls |
| 2 | Doyle | 16 | Optifast VLCD: 1000 kcal/ d | Median of 7.3 wk | Yes ( | Yes ( | 14 (1 inadequate volume, 1 fibrosis) | No significant difference from controls |
| 3 | Choudhary | 16 | 1200 kcal/d + 200 to 400 kcal/d exercise ± statins | Mean 28 ± 10 d | Yes ( | Yes ( | 14 (2 had NASH/fibrosis) | No reported complication in perioperative period |
| 4 | Oshita | 42 | 800 to 1400 kcal/d diet + 100 to 400 kcal/d exercise | Median 2.9 mo | Yes ( | Yes, to < 20 % | 41 (1 had stage 2 fibrosis) | No different from control group |
| 5 | Nakamuta | 11 | 1000 kcal/d diet + exercise (600 kcal/d) + Bezafibrate | Mean 37.8 ± 4.6 d | Yes( | Yes( | 7 (2 recipient deaths, 1 inadequate GRWR) | No different from control group |
| 6 | Hwang | 9 | Diet (25-30 calories x ideal body weight) + exercise | Median of 3 mo | Yes ( | Yes ( | 9 | No different from control group |
BMI: Body mass index; GRWR: Graft weight/recipient weight ratios; NASH: Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis; VLCD: Very low calorie diet.
Figure 1Forest plot showing mean difference in body mass index post-pre intervention in the intervention groups. Mean difference = -2.08 (-3.06, 1.10, I2 = 78%), with a significantly lower post-intervention body mass index as compared to the pre-intervention body mass index. CI: Confidence interval; SD: Standard deviation.
Figure 2Forest plot showing mean difference in steatosis post-pre intervention. Mean difference = -21.22 (-27.02, -15.43, I2 = 56%), with significantly lower post intervention steatosis as compared to pre intervention steatosis. CI: Confidence interval; SD: Standard deviation.
Figure 3Living liver donation rates after weight loss interventions. Rate = 88.5% (74.5%-95.3%, I2 = 42%). CI: Confidence interval.
Figure 4Odds ratio comparing rate of donor post-operative biliary complications in intervention group compared to control donors - odds ratio 0.96 (0.14, 6.69), I2 = 0.