A survey of liver transplantation from living adult donors in the United States

被引:364
|
作者
Brown, RS
Russo, MW
Lai, M
Shiffman, ML
Richardson, MC
Everhart, JE
Hoofnagle, JH
机构
[1] Columbia Univ, Coll Phys & Surg, Dept Med, New York, NY USA
[2] New York Presbyterian Hosp, Ctr Liver Dis & Transplantat, New York, NY USA
[3] Virginia Commonwealth Univ Hlth Syst, Dept Med, Richmond, VA USA
[4] NIDDKD, Div Digest Dis & Nutr, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
来源
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE | 2003年 / 348卷 / 09期
关键词
D O I
10.1056/NEJMsa021345
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
BACKGROUND The transplantation of the right lobe of a liver from a living adult donor into an adult recipient has been performed increasingly frequently in the United States. Although the use of grafts from living donors is standard practice in transplantation in children, their use in adults remains controversial. METHODS To study the use of liver transplantation from a living donor, we sent a 24-item questionnaire to all liver-transplantation programs in the United States. Data on indications, evaluation, and outcomes were analyzed with the use of univariate and multivariate methods. Data on recent transplantations were gathered from the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients and directly from the transplantation programs. RESULTS Questionnaires were returned by 84 of the 122 programs (69 percent) describing the results of 449 adult-to-adult transplantations of partial livers from living donors that were performed in 42 centers. Fourteen centers had performed more than 10 such transplantations each and together accounted for 80 percent of such transplantations. Centers that performed such transplantations also performed more transplantations of livers from cadaveric donors and more transplantations from living donors in children than centers that did not perform the adult-to-adult procedure (P=0.002 and P=0.001, respectively). A total of 45 percent of potential donors who were evaluated eventually donated a lobe of their liver; 99 percent of these donors were genetically or emotionally related to the recipient. Complications in the donor were more frequent in the centers performing the fewest transplantations from living donors in adults and included biliary complications requiring intervention (in 6.0 percent), reoperation (in 4.5 percent), and death (in one donor [0.2 percent]). Among the recipients, 1.6 percent did not meet criteria for receipt of a cadaveric transplant; cancer, retransplantation, and acute liver failure were uncommon indications for transplantation from a living donor. Biliary complications occurred in 22.0 percent of recipients, and vascular complications occurred in 9.8 percent. CONCLUSIONS Adult-to-adult liver transplantation from a living donor is increasingly performed in the United States but is concentrated in a few large-volume centers. Mortality among donors is low, but complications in the donor are relatively common.
引用
收藏
页码:818 / 825
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] LEFT LIVER LOBE TRANSPLANTATION IN ADULT RECIPIENTS FROM SPLIT LIVERS AND LIVING DONORS.
    Joo, Dong Jin
    Kim, Myoung Soo
    Kim, Soo Jin
    Choi, Gi Hong
    Ju, Man Ki
    Choi, Jin Sub
    Kim, Soon Il
    LIVER TRANSPLANTATION, 2009, 15 (07) : S273 - S274
  • [32] Financial comparison of adult-to-adult liver transplantation from living- vs deceased-donors.
    Mohanka, Ravi
    Kayler, Liise
    Tom, Kusum
    Fontes, Paulo
    Dvorchik, Igor
    DeVera, Mike
    Soltys, Kyle
    Blisard, Deanna
    Sharma, Vivek
    Starzl, Thomas E.
    Marcos, Amadeo
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, 2007, 7 : 472 - 472
  • [33] Dual kidneys from marginal adult donors as a source for cadaveric renal transplantation in the United States
    Bunnapradist, S
    Gritsch, HA
    Peng, A
    Jordan, SC
    Cho, YW
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY, 2003, 14 (04): : 1031 - 1036
  • [34] Current Status of Living Donor Liver Transplantation in the United States
    Abu-Gazala, Samir
    Olthoff, Kim M.
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF MEDICINE, VOL 70, 2019, 70 : 225 - 238
  • [35] Living donor liver transplantation in the United States: The way forward
    Te, Helen S.
    Humar, Abhinav
    CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, 2023, 37 (07)
  • [36] Domino liver transplantation in living donors
    Hashikura, Y
    Ikegami, T
    Nakazawa, Y
    Urata, K
    Mihara, M
    Mita, A
    Sakon, M
    Miyagawa, S
    Ikeda, S
    TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS, 2005, 37 (02) : 1076 - 1078
  • [37] Landscape of Living Donor Kidney Transplantation with International Donors in the United States.
    Thomas, A.
    Henderson, M.
    Shaffer, A.
    Massie, A.
    Koons, B.
    Lentine, K.
    Segev, D.
    Al Ammary, F.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, 2018, 18 : 264 - 264
  • [38] Variation in Adult Living Donor Liver Transplantation in the United States: Identifying Opportunities for Increased Utilization.
    Lentine, K.
    Axelrod, D.
    Schnitzler, M.
    Li, R.
    Dew, M.
    Bitterman, T.
    Olthoff, K.
    Locke, J.
    Emre, S.
    Hunt, H.
    Tanaka, T.
    Liapakis, A.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, 2022, 22 : 393 - 393
  • [39] AMBIVALENCE IN ADULT LIVING LIVER DONORS
    Simpson, Mary Ann
    Kendrick, Julia B.
    Verbesey, Jennifer E.
    Morin, Denise S.
    Pomposelli, James J.
    Pomfret, Elizabeth A.
    LIVER TRANSPLANTATION, 2008, 14 (07) : S100 - S100
  • [40] A survey of transplant providers regarding attitudes, barriers, and facilitators to living donor liver transplantation in the United States
    Liapakis, AnnMarie
    Agbim, Uchenna
    Bittermann, Therese
    Dew, Mary Amanda
    Deng, Yanhong
    Gan, Geliang
    Emre, Sukru
    Hunt, Heather F.
    Olthoff, Kim M.
    Locke, Jayme E.
    Jesse, Michelle T.
    Kumar, Vineeta
    Pillai, Anjana
    Verna, Elizabeth
    Lentine, Krista L.
    CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, 2023, 37 (07)