Journal of Clinical Medicine (Sep 2023)

Comparing High- and Low-Model for End-Stage Liver Disease Living-Donor Liver Transplantation to Determine Clinical Efficacy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (CHALICE Study)

  • Kumar Jayant,
  • Thomas G. Cotter,
  • Isabella Reccia,
  • Francesco Virdis,
  • Mauro Podda,
  • Nikolaos Machairas,
  • Ramesh P. Arasaradnam,
  • Diego di Sabato,
  • John C. LaMattina,
  • Rolf N. Barth,
  • Piotr Witkowski,
  • John J. Fung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12185795
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 18
p. 5795

Abstract

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Introduction: Various studies have demonstrated that low-Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) living-donor liver transplant (LDLT) recipients have better outcomes with improved patient survival than deceased-donor liver transplantation (DDLT) recipients. LDLT recipients gain the most from being transplanted at MELD p-value 0.40) and graft survival (HR 1.08; 95% CI 0.72, 1.63; p-value 0.71). No differences were observed in the rates of major morbidity, hepatic artery thrombosis, biliary complications, intra-abdominal bleeding, wound infection and rejection; however, the HM-LDLT group had higher risk for pulmonary infection, abdominal fluid collection and prolonged ICU stay. Conclusions: The high-MELD LDLT group had similar patient and graft survival and morbidities to the low-MELD LDLT group, despite being at higher risk for pulmonary infection, abdominal fluid collection and prolonged ICU stay. The data, primarily sourced from high-volume Asian centers, underscore the feasibility of living donations for liver allografts in high-MELD patients. Given the rising demand for liver allografts, it is sensible to incorporate these insights into U.S. transplant practices.

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