1. Outcomes after liver transplantation of patients with Indo-Asian ethnicity.
- Author
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Rocha C, Perera MT, Roberts K, Bonney G, Gunson B, Nightingale P, Bramhall SR, Isaac J, Muiesan P, and Mirza DF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Chi-Square Distribution, Databases, Factual, End Stage Liver Disease diagnosis, End Stage Liver Disease mortality, England epidemiology, Female, Graft Survival, Health Services Accessibility, Healthcare Disparities ethnology, Humans, Incidence, India ethnology, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Liver Failure, Acute diagnosis, Liver Failure, Acute mortality, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Proportional Hazards Models, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Waiting Lists, White People, Young Adult, Asian People, End Stage Liver Disease ethnology, End Stage Liver Disease surgery, Liver Failure, Acute ethnology, Liver Failure, Acute surgery, Liver Transplantation adverse effects, Liver Transplantation mortality
- Abstract
Background: The impact of ethnicity on outcomes after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) is unclear. The British Indo-Asian population has a high incidence of liver disease but its contribution to the national deceased donor pool is small. We evaluated access to and outcomes of OLT in Indo-Asians., Methods: We compared 182 Indo-Asians with white patients undergoing OLT. Matching criteria were transplantation year, liver disease, age, sex. Donor and recipient characteristics, postoperative outcomes, including patient and graft survival, OLT era (early, 1987-2001; late, 2002-2011) were compared. Survival was also analyzed by underlying disease-acute liver failure (ALF) and chronic liver failure., Results: Indo-Asians had higher diabetes incidence. There were no differences in waiting time for transplantation, despite smaller body size and more uncommon blood groups (B, AB) among Indo-Asians. In the early era, patient survival for Indo-Asians with ALF was worse when compared to whites. In the late era, graft and patient survival at 1, 2, and 5 years were similar between groups., Conclusion: This study demonstrates that Indo-Asian patients have equal access to OLT and comparable outcomes to whites in the United Kingdom. Survival has improved among Indo-Asian patients; this may be attributable to careful patient selection in case of ALF, though improvement of patient management may have contributed.
- Published
- 2015
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