Split liver transplantation(SLT),while widely accepted in pediatrics,remains underutilized in adults. Advancements in surgical techniques and donor-recipient matching,however,have allowed expansion of SLT from utiliza...Split liver transplantation(SLT),while widely accepted in pediatrics,remains underutilized in adults. Advancements in surgical techniques and donor-recipient matching,however,have allowed expansion of SLT from utilization of the right trisegment graft to now include use of the hemiliver graft as well. Despite less favorable outcomes in the early experience,better outcomes have been reported by experienced centers and have further validated the feasibility of SLT. Importantly,more than two decades of experience have identified key requirements for successful SLT in adults. When these requirements are met,SLT can achieve outcomes equivalent to those achieved with other types of liver transplantation for adults. However,substantial challenges,such as surgical techniques,logistics,and ethics,persist as ongoing barriers to further expansion of this highly complex procedure. This review outlines the current state of SLT in adults,focusing on donor and recipient selection based on physiology,surgical techniques,surgical outcomes,and ethical issues.展开更多
BACKGROUND:Locoregional therapies(LRTs) are treatments to achieve local control of hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC).Correlation between radiologic response to LRT and degree of induced tumor necrosis is not well understo...BACKGROUND:Locoregional therapies(LRTs) are treatments to achieve local control of hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC).Correlation between radiologic response to LRT and degree of induced tumor necrosis is not well understood.The aim of this study was to evaluate different levels of radiologic response after pre-liver transplant(LT) LRT and its correlation with percentage of tumor necrosis on explanted histopathology.METHODS:Institutional Review Board approved LT database was queried for treated HCC in patients undergoing LT.Radiologic response was evaluated to predict tumor necrosis in the explanted liver.Tumor response was evaluated 1 to 3 months after LRT with computed tomography or MRI via Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors(RECIST),and European Association for the Study of the Liver(EASL) guidelines.LRT was repeated as needed until time of LT.Histological tumor necrosis was graded as complete(100%),partial(50%-99%),or poor(【50%).RESULTS:Between 2002 and 2011,128 patients(97 men and 31 women) received pre-LT LRT including transarterial therapy(93),radiofrequency ablation(20),or combination of both(15).The mean age of the patients was 58±9 years.Their mean follow-up was 35±27 months.The median waitlist time was 55 days.One hundred(78%) patients had HCC within the Milan criteria at the initial radiologic diagnosis.Nineteen(15%) of the patients had complete tumor necrosis on histopathology analysis.Fifty(39%) of the patients exhibited partial necrosis,52(41%) showed poor or no necrosis and 7(5%) showed progressive disease.The overall pre-LT radiologic staging was correlated with explant pathology in 73(57%) of the patients.Underestimated tumor stage was noted in 49(38%) patients,and overestimated tumor stage in 6(5%) patients.The post-LT 3-year overall survival and disease free survival were 82% and 80%,and the rates for complete and partial tumor necrosis were 100% vs 78%(P=0.02) and 100% vs 75%(P=0.03),respectively.CONCLUSIONS:In the current era,interpretation of radiologic response after LRT for HCC does not correlate accurately with histologic tumor necrosis.Total tumor necrosis is the goal of LRT;therefore,evolution in its performance is needed.Similarly,ways to predict therapy induced tumor necrosis via radiological investigation need to be improved.展开更多
BACKGROUND There is a nationwide shortage of organs available for liver transplantation.Living donors help meet this growing demand.Not uncommonly,donors will have positive autoantibodies.However,it is unclear whether...BACKGROUND There is a nationwide shortage of organs available for liver transplantation.Living donors help meet this growing demand.Not uncommonly,donors will have positive autoantibodies.However,it is unclear whether donor positive autoantibodies are correlated with worse outcomes following living liver donor transplantations.AIM To analyze the significance of positive autoantibodies in donors on post-transplant outcomes in recipients.METHODS We performed a retrospective review of living liver donors who had undergone liver transplantation between January 1,2012 and August 31,2021.Demographic characteristics and pre-transplant data including antinuclear antibodies(ANA)and anti-smooth muscle antibody titers were collected in donors.Outcomes of interest were post-transplantation complications including mortality,biliary strictures,biliary leaks,infection,and rejection.Pediatric recipients and donors without measured pre-transplant autoantibody serologies were excluded from this study.RESULTS 172 living donor liver transplantations were performed during the study period,of which 115 patients met inclusion criteria.37(32%)living donors were autoantibody-positive with a median ANA titer of 1:160(range 1:80 to 1:1280)and median anti-SMA titer of 1:40(range 1:20 to 1:160).There were no significant differences in baseline demographics between the autoantibody positive and negative donors.Post-transplantation rates of death(P value=1),infections(P value=0.66),and overall rates of complications(P value=0.52)were similar between the autoantibody positive and negative groups.Higher incidences of anastomotic strictures and rejection were observed in the autoantibody positive group;however,these differences were not statistically significant(P value=0.07 and P value=0.30 respectively).CONCLUSION Isolated pre-transplant autoantibody positivity is not correlated to worse post-transplant outcomes in living liver donor transplants.展开更多
We congratulate Yamamoto et al.on their study“Impact of Portable Normothermic Machine Perfusion for Liver Transplantation from Adult Deceased Donors”(1).The surge of interest in normothermic machine perfusion(NMP)in...We congratulate Yamamoto et al.on their study“Impact of Portable Normothermic Machine Perfusion for Liver Transplantation from Adult Deceased Donors”(1).The surge of interest in normothermic machine perfusion(NMP)in the United States(US)has generated considerable enthusiasm.The authors present generally exciting results from their single-center analysis of 541 liver transplantations.Among these,469 were from donors after brain dead(DBD);58(12.4%)received NMP and 411 static cold storage(SCS,87.6%).Seventy-two transplants were from donors after circulatory death(DCD);52(72.2%)received NMP(device-to-donor)vs.20 SCS(27.8%).展开更多
Further to refinements in immunosuppression and the significant gains witnessed in outcomes over recent decades, liver transplantation has firmly established itself as the definitive treatment for end stage liver dise...Further to refinements in immunosuppression and the significant gains witnessed in outcomes over recent decades, liver transplantation has firmly established itself as the definitive treatment for end stage liver disease and selected instances of hepatic malignancy. However, there exists a constant divide between organ supply and demand, with the numbers of new entrants to liver transplant waiting lists consistently and significantly outstripping that of transplants performed annually, as exemplified by United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) data from the United States (1).展开更多
文摘Split liver transplantation(SLT),while widely accepted in pediatrics,remains underutilized in adults. Advancements in surgical techniques and donor-recipient matching,however,have allowed expansion of SLT from utilization of the right trisegment graft to now include use of the hemiliver graft as well. Despite less favorable outcomes in the early experience,better outcomes have been reported by experienced centers and have further validated the feasibility of SLT. Importantly,more than two decades of experience have identified key requirements for successful SLT in adults. When these requirements are met,SLT can achieve outcomes equivalent to those achieved with other types of liver transplantation for adults. However,substantial challenges,such as surgical techniques,logistics,and ethics,persist as ongoing barriers to further expansion of this highly complex procedure. This review outlines the current state of SLT in adults,focusing on donor and recipient selection based on physiology,surgical techniques,surgical outcomes,and ethical issues.
文摘BACKGROUND:Locoregional therapies(LRTs) are treatments to achieve local control of hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC).Correlation between radiologic response to LRT and degree of induced tumor necrosis is not well understood.The aim of this study was to evaluate different levels of radiologic response after pre-liver transplant(LT) LRT and its correlation with percentage of tumor necrosis on explanted histopathology.METHODS:Institutional Review Board approved LT database was queried for treated HCC in patients undergoing LT.Radiologic response was evaluated to predict tumor necrosis in the explanted liver.Tumor response was evaluated 1 to 3 months after LRT with computed tomography or MRI via Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors(RECIST),and European Association for the Study of the Liver(EASL) guidelines.LRT was repeated as needed until time of LT.Histological tumor necrosis was graded as complete(100%),partial(50%-99%),or poor(【50%).RESULTS:Between 2002 and 2011,128 patients(97 men and 31 women) received pre-LT LRT including transarterial therapy(93),radiofrequency ablation(20),or combination of both(15).The mean age of the patients was 58±9 years.Their mean follow-up was 35±27 months.The median waitlist time was 55 days.One hundred(78%) patients had HCC within the Milan criteria at the initial radiologic diagnosis.Nineteen(15%) of the patients had complete tumor necrosis on histopathology analysis.Fifty(39%) of the patients exhibited partial necrosis,52(41%) showed poor or no necrosis and 7(5%) showed progressive disease.The overall pre-LT radiologic staging was correlated with explant pathology in 73(57%) of the patients.Underestimated tumor stage was noted in 49(38%) patients,and overestimated tumor stage in 6(5%) patients.The post-LT 3-year overall survival and disease free survival were 82% and 80%,and the rates for complete and partial tumor necrosis were 100% vs 78%(P=0.02) and 100% vs 75%(P=0.03),respectively.CONCLUSIONS:In the current era,interpretation of radiologic response after LRT for HCC does not correlate accurately with histologic tumor necrosis.Total tumor necrosis is the goal of LRT;therefore,evolution in its performance is needed.Similarly,ways to predict therapy induced tumor necrosis via radiological investigation need to be improved.
文摘BACKGROUND There is a nationwide shortage of organs available for liver transplantation.Living donors help meet this growing demand.Not uncommonly,donors will have positive autoantibodies.However,it is unclear whether donor positive autoantibodies are correlated with worse outcomes following living liver donor transplantations.AIM To analyze the significance of positive autoantibodies in donors on post-transplant outcomes in recipients.METHODS We performed a retrospective review of living liver donors who had undergone liver transplantation between January 1,2012 and August 31,2021.Demographic characteristics and pre-transplant data including antinuclear antibodies(ANA)and anti-smooth muscle antibody titers were collected in donors.Outcomes of interest were post-transplantation complications including mortality,biliary strictures,biliary leaks,infection,and rejection.Pediatric recipients and donors without measured pre-transplant autoantibody serologies were excluded from this study.RESULTS 172 living donor liver transplantations were performed during the study period,of which 115 patients met inclusion criteria.37(32%)living donors were autoantibody-positive with a median ANA titer of 1:160(range 1:80 to 1:1280)and median anti-SMA titer of 1:40(range 1:20 to 1:160).There were no significant differences in baseline demographics between the autoantibody positive and negative donors.Post-transplantation rates of death(P value=1),infections(P value=0.66),and overall rates of complications(P value=0.52)were similar between the autoantibody positive and negative groups.Higher incidences of anastomotic strictures and rejection were observed in the autoantibody positive group;however,these differences were not statistically significant(P value=0.07 and P value=0.30 respectively).CONCLUSION Isolated pre-transplant autoantibody positivity is not correlated to worse post-transplant outcomes in living liver donor transplants.
文摘We congratulate Yamamoto et al.on their study“Impact of Portable Normothermic Machine Perfusion for Liver Transplantation from Adult Deceased Donors”(1).The surge of interest in normothermic machine perfusion(NMP)in the United States(US)has generated considerable enthusiasm.The authors present generally exciting results from their single-center analysis of 541 liver transplantations.Among these,469 were from donors after brain dead(DBD);58(12.4%)received NMP and 411 static cold storage(SCS,87.6%).Seventy-two transplants were from donors after circulatory death(DCD);52(72.2%)received NMP(device-to-donor)vs.20 SCS(27.8%).
文摘Further to refinements in immunosuppression and the significant gains witnessed in outcomes over recent decades, liver transplantation has firmly established itself as the definitive treatment for end stage liver disease and selected instances of hepatic malignancy. However, there exists a constant divide between organ supply and demand, with the numbers of new entrants to liver transplant waiting lists consistently and significantly outstripping that of transplants performed annually, as exemplified by United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) data from the United States (1).