Annals of Hepatology (Oct 2009)

Adult living donor versus deceased donor liver transplantation: A 10-year prospective single center experience

  • Robert A. Fisher,
  • Adrian H. Cotterell,
  • Daniel G. Maluf,
  • Richard Todd Stravitz,
  • April Ashworth,
  • Mitsuru Nakatsuka,
  • Richard K. Sterling,
  • Velimir A. Luketic,
  • Martha K. Behnke,
  • Marc P. Posner

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
pp. 298 – 307

Abstract

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It has been 4 years since the first, long-term (> 3 years) prospective comparison of adult-to-adult living donor liver transplantation (A2ALLTx) to adult deceased donor liver transplantation (ADDLTx) was reported.1 In this follow up, prospective, IRB approved, 10-year comparison of A2ALLTx to ADDLTx we expand on our initial observations. This data includes: age, gender, ethnicity, primary liver disease, waiting time, pretrans-plant CTP/MELD score, cold ischemia time (CIT), perioperative mortality, acute and chronic rejection, graft and patient survival, charges and post-transplant complications.In 10 years, 465 ADDLTx (81.37) and 107 A2ALLTx (18.7%) were performed at VCUHS. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) was the most common reason for transplantation in both groups (54.5% vs. 48.2%). Data regarding overall patient and graft survival and retransplantation rates were similar. Comparison of patient/graft survivals, retransplantation rates in patients with and without HCV were not statistically different. A2ALLTx patients had less acute rejection (9.6% vs. 21.7%) and more biliary complications (27.1% vs. 17.6%).In conclusion, A2ALLTx is as durable a liver replacement technique as the ADDLTx. Patients with A2ALLTx were younger, had lower MELD scores, less acute rejection and similar histological HCV recurrence. Biliary complications were more common in A2ALLTx but were not associated with increased graft loss compared to ADDLTx.

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