1. The impact of advanced patient age in liver transplantation: a European Liver Transplant Registry propensity-score matching study
- Author
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Gabriel C Oniscu, Concepcion Gomez Gavara, Eylon Lahat, Constantino Fondevila, Daniel Esono, Daniel Azoulay, Daniel Cherqui, Krzysztof Zieniewicz, Jacques Pirenne, Chady Salloum, Stefan Schneeberger, Chris J Watson, Darius F. Mirza, Johann Pratschke, Karim Boudjema, Francesco Esposito, Chetana Lim, René Adam, Cyrille Feray, Vincent Karam, and Michael A. Heneghan
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Graft Survival ,Liver Neoplasms ,Gastroenterology ,Liver transplantation ,Liver Transplantation ,Liver Cirrhosis, Alcoholic ,Risk Factors ,Patient age ,Internal medicine ,Propensity score matching ,Humans ,Medicine ,Registries ,Propensity Score ,business ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
The futility of liver transplantation in elderly recipients remains under debate in the HCV eradication era.The aim was to assess the effect of older age on outcome after liver transplantation. We used the ELTR to study the relationship between recipient age and post-transplant outcome. Young and elderly recipients were compared using a PSM method.A total of 10,172 cases were analysed. Recipient age65 years was identified as an independent risk factor associated with reduced patient survival (HR:1.42 95%CI:1.23-1.65,p 0.001). After PSM, 2124 patients were matched, and the same association was found between elderly recipients and patient survival and graft survival (p 0.001). As hepatocellular carcinoma and alcoholic cirrhosis were independent prognostic factors for patient and graft survival a propensity score-matching was performed for each. Patient and graft survival were significantly worse (p 0.05) in the alcoholic cirrhosis elderly group. However, patient and graft survival in the hepatocellular carcinoma cohort were similar (p 0.05) between groups.Liver transplantation is an acceptable and safe curative option for elderly transplant candidates, with worse long-term outcomes compare to young candidates. The underlying liver disease for liver transplantation has a significant impact on the selection of elderly patients.
- Published
- 2022
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