Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jan 2021)

Treatment of Hepatic Artery Stenosis in Liver Transplant Patients Using Drug-Eluting versus Bare-Metal Stents

  • Sailendra Naidu,
  • Sadeer Alzubaidi,
  • Grace Knuttinen,
  • Indravadan Patel,
  • Andrew Fleck,
  • John Sweeney,
  • Bashar Aqel,
  • Brandon Larsen,
  • Matthew Buras,
  • Michael Golafshar,
  • Rahmi Oklu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10030380
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
p. 380

Abstract

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Hepatic artery stenosis after liver transplant is often treated with endovascular stent placement. Our institution has adopted use of drug-eluting stents, particularly in small-caliber arteries. We aimed to compare patency rates of drug-eluting stents vs. traditional bare-metal stents. This was a single-institution, retrospective study of liver transplant hepatic artery stenosis treated with stents. Primary patency was defined as time from stent placement to resistive index on Doppler ultrasonography (p = 0.41). Primary patency for small-caliber arteries (3.5–4.5 mm) with drug-eluting stents was 93%, 75%, 75%, and 75%; bare-metal stents: 60%, 60%, 50%, and 38% (p = 0.19). Overall survival was 100%, 100%, 94%, and 91%. Graft survival was 100%, 98%, 96%, and 90%. Stenting for hepatic artery stenosis was safe and effective. While not statistically significant, patency improved with drug-eluting stents compared with bare-metal stents, especially in arteries < 4.5 mm in diameter. Drug-eluting stents can be considered for liver transplant hepatic artery stenosis, particularly in small-caliber arteries.

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