Cancers (May 2024)

Liver Transplantation from Elderly Donors (≥85 Years Old)

  • Pierluigi Romano,
  • Luis Cano,
  • Daniel Pietrasz,
  • Nassiba Beghdadi,
  • Marc-Antoine Allard,
  • Chady Salloum,
  • Frédérique Blandin,
  • Oriana Ciacio,
  • Gabriella Pittau,
  • René Adam,
  • Daniel Azoulay,
  • Antonio Sa Cunha,
  • Eric Vibert,
  • Luciano De Carlis,
  • Alessandro Vitale,
  • Umberto Cillo,
  • Daniel Cherqui,
  • Nicolas Golse

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16101803
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
p. 1803

Abstract

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Background: Despite the ongoing trend of increasing donor ages in liver transplantation (LT) setting, a notable gap persists in the availability of comprehensive guidelines for the utilization of organs from elderly donors. This study aimed to evaluate the viability of livers grafts from donors aged ≥85 years and report the post-LT outcomes compared with those from “ideal” donors under 40 years old. Methods: Conducted retrospectively at a single center from 2005 to 2023, this study compared outcomes of LTs from donors aged ≥85 y/o and ≤40 y/o, with the propensity score matching to the recipient’s gender, age, BMI, MELD score, redo-LT, LT indication, and cause of donor death. Results: A total of 76 patients received grafts from donors ≥85 y/o and were compared to 349 liver grafts from donors ≤40 y/o. Prior to PSM, the 5-year overall survival was 63% for the elderly group and 77% for the young group (p = 0.002). After PSM, the 5-year overall survival was 63% and 73% (p = 0.1). A nomogram, developed at the time of graft acceptance and including HCC features, predicted 10-year survival after LT using a graft from a donor aged ≥85. Conclusions: In the context of organ scarcity, elderly donors emerge as a partial solution. Nonetheless, without proper selection, LT using very elderly donors yields inferior long-term outcomes compared to transplantation from very young donors ≤40 y/o. The resulting nomogram based on pre-transplant criteria allows for the optimization of elderly donor/recipient matching to achieve satisfactory long-term results, in addition to traditional matching methods.

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