ABCD: Arquivos Brasileiros de Cirurgia Digestiva (Mar 2014)

Combined liver-kidney transplantation: experience at a brazilian university hospital

  • Francisca Jovita de Oliveira VERAS,
  • Gustavo Rêgo COELHO,
  • Bartolomeu Alves FEITOSA-NETO,
  • João Batista Gadelha CERQUEIRA,
  • Regina Célia F. Gomes GARCIA,
  • José Huygens Parente GARCIA

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/s0102-67202014000100013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 1
pp. 53 – 55

Abstract

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Background: Combined liver-kidney transplant is a routine procedure in many transplant centers. The increase in its number coincided with the introduction in 2002 of the MELD (Model for End-stage Liver Disease) score for allocation of livers, prioritizing patients with renal dysfunction. Aim : To analyze the experience with combined liver-kidney transplantation in a liver transplant center in Brazil. Method : A retrospective review was conducted. All transplants were performed using grafts from deceased donors. Results : Sixteen combined liver-kidney transplantations were performed in the same period, which corresponds to 2.7% and 2.5% of the kidney and liver transplants, respectively. Fourteen patients were male (87.5 %) and two were female (12.5%). The average patients and donors age was 57.3±9.1 and 32.7±13.1, respectively. The MELD score mean was 23.6±3.67. The main cause of liver dysfunction were chronic hepatitis C virus (n=9). As for renal dysfunction, diabetic nephropathy (n=4) was the most frequent. There were six deaths, two of them by severe dysfunction of the liver graft and four by infectious causes. The 1, 3 and 5 years survival rate in patients undergoing liver-kidney transplantations was 68.8%, 57.3% and 57.3%, respectively. Conclusion : The survival rates achieved in this series are considered satisfactory and show that this procedure has an acceptable morbidity and survival.

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