Journal of Clinical Medicine (Sep 2023)

Frequent Follow-Up of Delisted Liver Transplant Candidates Is Necessary: An Observational Study about Characteristics and Outcomes of Delisted Liver Transplant Candidates

  • Elnaz Payani,
  • Dionysios Koliogiannis,
  • Markus Bo Schoenberg,
  • Dominik Koch,
  • Daniela Eser-Valeri,
  • Gerald Denk,
  • Markus Rehm,
  • Simon Schäfer,
  • Ursula Ehmer,
  • Andreas E. Kremer,
  • Bruno Meiser,
  • Jens Werner,
  • Markus Guba,
  • Nikolaus Börner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12185880
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 18
p. 5880

Abstract

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This observational study focuses on the characteristics and survival of patients taken off of the liver transplant waiting list. Assessment of post-delisting survival and a frequent follow-up of patients after delisting are important keys to improve the survival rate of patients with liver failure after being delisted. Within this study, delisted liver transplant candidates were divided into the following groups: (1) “too good” (54%) or (2) “too sick” (22%) for transplantation, (3) adherence issues (12%) or (4) therapy goal changed (11%). The 5-year survival after delisting within these groups was 84%, 9%, 50%, and 68%, respectively. Less than 3% of the delisted patients had to be relisted again. The clinical expert decision of the multidisciplinary transplant team was sufficiently accurate to differentiate between patients requiring liver transplantation and those who were delisted after a stable recovery of liver function. The assessment of post-delisting survival may serve as a complementary metric to assess differences in center practices and to estimate cumulative post-delisting mortality risk.

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