Arquivos de Gastroenterologia (Jun 2012)

Predictive factors of early graft loss in living donor liver transplantation

  • Rogério Camargo Pinheiro Alves,
  • Eduardo Antunes da Fonseca,
  • Carla Adriana Loureiro de Mattos,
  • Sofia Abdalla,
  • José Eduardo Gonçalves,
  • Jaques Waisberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0004-28032012000200011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 49, no. 2
pp. 157 – 161

Abstract

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CONTEXT: Living donor liver transplantation has become an alternative to reduce the lack of organ donation. OBJECTIVE: To identify factors predictive of early graft loss in the first 3 months after living donor liver transplantation. METHODS: Seventy-eight adults submitted to living donor liver transplantation were divided into group I with 62 (79.5%) patients with graft survival longer than 3 months, and group II with 16 (20.5%) patients who died and/or showed graft failure within 3 months after liver transplantation. The variables analyzed were gender, age, etiology of liver disease, Child-Pugh classification, model of end-stage liver disease (MELD score), pretransplantation serum sodium level, and graft weight-to-recipient body weight (GRBW) ratio. The GRBW ratio was categorized into 18. The chi-square test, Student t-test and uni- and multivariate analysis were used for the evaluation of risk factors for early graft loss. RESULTS: MELD score 135 mEq/L (P = 0.03) were higher in group II than in group I. In the multivariate analysis MELD scores > 18 (P18 and GRBW < 0.8 ratios are associated with higher probability of graft failure after living donor liver transplantation.

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