| Literature DB >> 35080708 |
Tomasz Litwin1, Jan Bembenek2, Agnieszka Antos3, Adam Przybyłkowski4, Marta Skowrońska3, Iwona Kurkowska-Jastrzębska3, Anna Członkowska3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Wilson's disease (WD) is a potentially treatable, genetic disorder of copper metabolism, with survival similar to healthy populations if controlled. However, in almost 50% of WD patients, neurological symptoms persist despite treatment, and in up to 10% of patients, neurological deterioration is irreversible. International guidelines on WD treatment do not recommend liver transplantation (LT) as a treatment for neurological symptoms in WD. However, such treatment has been assessed in retrospective analyses, case and series reports. We aimed to systematically assess all available evidence on the effectiveness and safety of LT in WD patients with neurological presentation.Entities:
Keywords: Copper; Liver transplantation; Neurological symptoms; Systematic review; Wilson’s disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35080708 PMCID: PMC8986686 DOI: 10.1007/s13760-022-01872-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurol Belg ISSN: 0300-9009 Impact factor: 2.396
Fig. 1PRISMA search diagram. A total of 352 articles were found during the initial screening and 48 articles were included in the qualitative synthesis
Summary of studies of WD patients with neurological symptoms who underwent liver transplantation
| Authors | Details of the patient population and study | Information on age at LT, time to LT from WD diagnosis, prior treatment and duration of follow-up (if available) | Details of the neurological assessment and MELD score before LT (if available) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ocal et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 53 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 35.2 years (all patients) Treatment type and duration not available | Neurological symptoms description | Tremor decreased in 3/4 WD patients |
| Poujois et al. [ | Study included 2 patients from Laurencin et al. [ Retrospective study | Median age at LT: 18.5 years (range 16–20.8) Median time to LT: 6.7 months (range 5.3–14.5) 11 patients initially treated with DPA, 6 on trientine, 1 on trientine and ZS. 12 switched to other WD treatments before LT Median follow-up: 40.9 months (18.1–93.2) | Neurological examination, UWDRS, mRS brain MRI score Median MELD: 8.5 (7–10.8) | Major neurological improvement in 8/18 WD patients, moderate in 4/18, stable in 2/18 Median improvement in UWDRS from 96 (75–112) to 38 (18–56) Improvement in mRS pre-LT 5 vs. 1.5 Improvement in brain MRI score: 7/18 had 75% decrease of MRI score, 7/18 had 33% decrease of MRI score 4/18 died |
| Ferrarese et al. [ | Retrospective study of 29 WD patients (27 analyzed) | Mean age at LT: 26 years (range 21–47) Mean time to LT: 7.5 years Mean follow-up: 72 months (range 0.3–130) | Neurological symptoms, UWDRS (6 patients) Mean MELD: 28 (11–49) | No significant difference in 6 patients with available UWDRS before and post-LT Post-LT course did not differ between patients with hepatic and mixed (with neuropsychiatric) presentation |
| Choudhary et al. [ | Retrospective study of 18 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 30. 6 years Mean time to LT: 3 years (all patients) Treated with DPA and ZS at time of LT (no detailed data) Mean follow-up: 15 months (range 8–38) | Neurological symptoms description | 1 patient fully recovered 2 patients partially recovered |
| Lankarani et al. [ | N = 60 (LT indication: chronic liver disease) Retrospective study of 107 WD patients | Range of years at LT: 5–59 Treatment type and duration not available Follow-up: 4015 days | Neurological symptoms description Mean MELD for chronic liver disease group: 20 (range 17.7–24) | Neuropsychiatric manifestation improved in 40 WD patients (67%) Neurological manifestations that were reduced post-LT vs. pre-LT included tremor (18% vs. 41%), ataxia (11% vs. 32%), gait disorder (7% vs. 18%), fine.m.task (3% vs. 18%) and depression (5% vs. 24%) No change in 2 patients Exacerbation of neurological symptoms in 18 patients (mostly drug related) |
| Yagci et al. [ | Retrospective study of 42 WD patients | Median age at LT: 19 years (range 10–25) Treatment type and duration not available Follow-up: 36.6 months | 12-item neurological scoring system (12–60 pts, where 1 pt is none and 5 pts is severe for each item) 19-item neuropsychological scoring system (0–19 pts, where 1 pt is present) Mean MELD: 18.3 (range 15–26) | Neurological scores improved (mean pre-LT 17.7 vs. post-LT 12.7), with worsening in 1 patient Neuropsychological scores improved (pre-LT 9.0 vs. post-LT 7.0), with progression in 1 patient |
| Guillaud et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 128 WD patients | Median age at LT: 22 years (range 7–66) (all patients) Median time from WD diagnosis to LT: 0.3 years (0–30) (all patients) WD treatment not provided for all patients Median follow-up: 72 months | Neurological symptoms description Mean MELD for 7 patients transplanted from neurological reasons: 10 (7–11) | Of the 7 patients transplanted for neurological reasons: 3 patients in major neurological improvement 3 died (2 months, 4 months and 36 months due to infections) Data unavailable for 1 patient Of the 19 patients transplanted for neurological and hepatic reasons 1 died 2 days after LT 3 patients completely recovered 5 partially recovered 1 stabilized 1 had initial worsening of neurological symptoms Data unavailable for 8 patients |
| Peedikayil et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 16 WD patients | Mean time at LT: 18.5 years (range 8–40) Mean time of WD treatment: 5.5 years Follow-up: up to 20 years | 4 patients had tremor and involuntary movements 2 patients had additional psychiatric symptoms 3 patients had abnormal brain MRI (scales assessment not available) | Resolution of neurological and psychiatric symptoms in all patients Normalization of brain MRI in 1 patient (lack of examination in 3 patients) |
| Weiss et al. [ | Retrospective study of medical records (from 19 patients, analysis was performed in 11 at all time-points, 5 patients deceased, 1 lost to follow-up) | Mean age at LT: 29.3 years (all patients) Mean age of WD diagnosis: 21.6 years (in chronic LF group) Mean time between WD diagnosis and LT: 14.9 years (excluding acute LF) Treatment type and duration not available | 12-item neurological scoring system (12–60 pts, where 1 pt is none and 5 pts is severe for each item) 19-item neuropsychological scoring system (0–19 pts, where 1 pt is present) Mean MELD for all 19 patients: 26.4 (not available for neurological patients) | Mean neurological scores at WD diagnosis, at LT and at follow-up improved: Chronic LF: 18.2 pts, 18.4 pts and 13.5 pts Acute LF: 15.6 pts, 18.4 pts and 12.6 pts 1/11 patient worsened, 7 improved, 3 were stable Mean psychiatric scores at WD diagnosis, OLT and at follow-up improved: Chronic LF: 5.8 pts, 6.5 pts and 4.2 pts Acute LF: 4.4 pts, 4.6 pts and 4.2 pts 2/11 patients worsened, 9 were stable |
| Cheng et al. [ | Mean age at LT: 36.9 years (range 29–45) (all patients) From 36 patients, 14 were treated with DPA for 2–9 years Data unavailable for neurological WD patients Mean follow-up: 45.2 months (range 3–88) | Scoring system involving symptoms and functional deficits (0–30 pts, where 0 is worse condition and 30 is no deficits) | Neurological function improved in all survivors Mean results: 16.2 pts pretransplant; 18.2 pts after 6 months; 23.9 pts after 1 year; 26.6 pts after 2 years 6 patients died due to LT complications | |
| Duarte-Rojo et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 11 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 23 years DPA, duration not available Follow-up: median 28 months (range 0–80) | Neurological symptoms description Mean MELD: 8.5 (range 6–11) | Remission of all neurological symptoms—patients returned to work |
| Yoshitoshi et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 32 WD patients (21 acute LF, 11 chronic liver disease) | Mean age at LT: 28 years (range 19–40) Mean duration of WD: 16.7 years Patients were treated before with DPA (3) and trientine (1) Mean follow-up: 7 years and 4 months (range 2–15) | Neurological symptoms description | 1 patient complete remission of symptoms 1 patient neurological symptoms remained unchanged 2 patients died–1 shortly after LT (bleeding from esophageal varices), 1 due to pneumonia |
| Martin et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 11 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 29.7 years Mean time from WD diagnosis to LT: 8.3 years (range 1–24) All patients treated DPA and/or ZS Mean follow-up: 56.8 months | Neurological symptoms description | 4 patients almost completely improved; 1 patient improved Improvement was observed up to 3 years after LT |
| Pabon et al. [ | Retrospective study of 13 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 29.7 years Mean time from WD diagnosis to LT: 38 months, treated with DPA or trientine Follow-up: 10 years | Neurological symptoms description | 1 patient with persistent neurological symptoms 1 patient improved |
| Marin et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 14 WD patients | Age of LT and duration of WD not available All patients were treated with DPA before LT Follow-up: 8 years (range 1–15) | Neurological symptoms description | 1 patient died due to acute liver rejection 2 patients were without neurological symptoms 1 patient neurologically improved substantially |
| Medici et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 37 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 27.5 years (range 15–56) (all patients) Mean duration of treatment: 36.2 months Most patients treated with DPA (details not available) Mean follow-up in 33 patients: 64.4 months (range 2–152) | Scoring system for neurological symptoms: rigidity, bradykinesia, ataxia, tremor, dyskinesia, dystonia and walking, eating, talking, daily-living activities (0–30 pts, where 30 is healthy) Psychiatric symptoms described (paranoid psychosis, neurosis, depression, insomnia, drug dependence) | After LT, neurological disability improved in 6/9, regressing completely in 2 cases Neurological deterioration in 3 patients: 1 within 2 months then remained stable 1 developed de novo severe neurological symptoms after LT—pontine myelinolysis and died 1 had neurological impairment after LT but was lost to follow-up (died 10 years later from sepsis) No regression of psychiatric symptoms |
| Wang et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 22 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 13.6 years (range 8–21) (all patients) Mean WD duration: 6.4 years; data on treatment not available Mean follow-up: 18.5 months (range 4–38) | Neurological symptoms description: tremor, bradykinesia, dysarthria, sialorrhea, difficulty in walking (improvement scored in %) | Marked neurological improvement in 10 alive patients between 80–95% |
| Wang et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 18 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 13.5 years (range 6–20) (all patients) Treatment type and duration not available Mean follow-up: 18.2 months (range 2–32) | Neurological symptoms description | 7/7 WD patients showed alleviation of a language handicap and dyskinesia |
| Geissler et al. [ | Retrospective study of 6 WD patients | Age at LT and WD diagnosis not provided; 3–24 years’ treatment with DPA (chronic liver disease patients) Follow-up: range 3–7 years | Neurological symptoms description 1 patient had psychiatric symptoms | Neurological recovery in 4 patients 2 patients recovered and returned to work (both complete recovery in 2 patients) |
| Ronghua et al. [ | Retrospective study of 18 WD patients | Age range at LT: 9–23 years Duration of WD not provided DPA for 3 months – 6 years | Neurological symptoms description only (without grading) | Neurological symptoms disappeared in most patients Neurological symptoms persisted in 2/15 patients |
| Eghtesad et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 45 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 22.1 years (range 9–39) Mean age at diagnosis: 15.4 years (range 3–31) Follow-up: range 2–26 years | Neurological symptoms description | Complete neurological improvement was seen in 9/13 survivors 1 other patient improved neurologically 3 did not improved 4 died (2 in group of acute LF and 1 in subacute LF) |
| Chen et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 33 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 21.4 years (range 16–32) (all patients) Treatment type and duration not available Mean follow-up: 62.7 months (range 36–130) | Neurological symptoms description | All 7 patients improved and returned to active lives (5 returned to work, 2 returned to school) 1 died 3 years after LT in a car accident |
| Bellary et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of 39 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 23 years (all patients) Mean duration of WD: 10.1 years; data on treatment not available Mean time from diagnosis to LT: 10 years Follow-up: 3–10 years | Neurological symptoms description | 2 died within 3 weeks of LT 7 WD patients improved neurologically significantly (90–100% recovery) |
| Schilsky et al. [ | Retrospective study of 55 WD patients | Mean age at LT: 25.5 years Treatment type and duration not available in neurological patients Follow-up: up to 20 years | Neurological symptoms description | 4 patients improved neurologically Psychiatric symptoms improved in 1 patient, but gait disturbances remained 3 WD patients died (1 after 6 weeks, 1 after 5 days, 1 after 13 months with AIDS) |
AIDS, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome; DPA, d-penicillamine; LF, liver failure; LT, liver transplantation; MELD, Model for End-Stage Liver Disease; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; mRS, modified Rankin scale; UWDRS, Unified Wilson’s Disease Rating Scale; WD, Wilson’s disease; ZS, zinc salts
Time to LT, time since WD diagnosis and treatment initiation to LT