101 results on '"Pravisani R"'
Search Results
2. Personalised management of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma: a multiparametric therapeutic hierarchy concept
- Author
-
Vitale, A, Cabibbo, G, Iavarone, M, Vigano, L, Pinato, D, Ponziani, F, Lai, Q, Casadei-Gardini, A, Celsa, C, Galati, G, Gambato, M, Crocetti, L, Renzulli, M, Giannini, E, Farinati, F, Trevisani, F, Cillo, U, Baccarani, U, Brancaccio, G, Cozzolongo, R, Cucchetti, A, De Matthaeis, N, Di Sandro, S, Famularo, S, Finotti, M, Foschi, F, Ghinolfi, D, Guarracino, M, Gruttadauria, S, Guarino, M, Kostandini, A, Lenci, I, Levi Sandri, G, Manzia, T, Marasco, G, Masarone, M, Mazzarelli, C, Melandro, F, Miele, L, Morisco, F, Nicolini, D, Pagano, D, Pelizzaro, F, Pieri, G, Piscaglia, F, Plaz Torres, M, Pravisani, R, Rendina, M, Romano, F, Russo, F, Sacco, R, Sangiovanni, A, Sposito, C, Tortora, R, Tovoli, F, Vigano, M, Violi, P, Vitale A., Cabibbo G., Iavarone M., Vigano L., Pinato D. J., Ponziani F. R., Lai Q., Casadei-Gardini A., Celsa C., Galati G., Gambato M., Crocetti L., Renzulli M., Giannini E. G., Farinati F., Trevisani F., Cillo U., Baccarani U., Brancaccio G., Cozzolongo R., Cucchetti A., De Matthaeis N., Di Sandro S., Famularo S., Finotti M., Foschi F. G., Ghinolfi D., Guarracino M., Gruttadauria S., Guarino M., Kostandini A., Lenci I., Levi Sandri G. B., Manzia T. M., Marasco G., Masarone M., Mazzarelli C., Melandro F., Miele L., Morisco F., Nicolini D., Pagano D., Pelizzaro F., Pieri G., Piscaglia F., Plaz Torres M. C., Pravisani R., Rendina M., Romano F., Russo F. P., Sacco R., Sangiovanni A., Sposito C., Tortora R., Tovoli F., Vigano M., Violi P., Vitale, A, Cabibbo, G, Iavarone, M, Vigano, L, Pinato, D, Ponziani, F, Lai, Q, Casadei-Gardini, A, Celsa, C, Galati, G, Gambato, M, Crocetti, L, Renzulli, M, Giannini, E, Farinati, F, Trevisani, F, Cillo, U, Baccarani, U, Brancaccio, G, Cozzolongo, R, Cucchetti, A, De Matthaeis, N, Di Sandro, S, Famularo, S, Finotti, M, Foschi, F, Ghinolfi, D, Guarracino, M, Gruttadauria, S, Guarino, M, Kostandini, A, Lenci, I, Levi Sandri, G, Manzia, T, Marasco, G, Masarone, M, Mazzarelli, C, Melandro, F, Miele, L, Morisco, F, Nicolini, D, Pagano, D, Pelizzaro, F, Pieri, G, Piscaglia, F, Plaz Torres, M, Pravisani, R, Rendina, M, Romano, F, Russo, F, Sacco, R, Sangiovanni, A, Sposito, C, Tortora, R, Tovoli, F, Vigano, M, Violi, P, Vitale A., Cabibbo G., Iavarone M., Vigano L., Pinato D. J., Ponziani F. R., Lai Q., Casadei-Gardini A., Celsa C., Galati G., Gambato M., Crocetti L., Renzulli M., Giannini E. G., Farinati F., Trevisani F., Cillo U., Baccarani U., Brancaccio G., Cozzolongo R., Cucchetti A., De Matthaeis N., Di Sandro S., Famularo S., Finotti M., Foschi F. G., Ghinolfi D., Guarracino M., Gruttadauria S., Guarino M., Kostandini A., Lenci I., Levi Sandri G. B., Manzia T. M., Marasco G., Masarone M., Mazzarelli C., Melandro F., Miele L., Morisco F., Nicolini D., Pagano D., Pelizzaro F., Pieri G., Piscaglia F., Plaz Torres M. C., Pravisani R., Rendina M., Romano F., Russo F. P., Sacco R., Sangiovanni A., Sposito C., Tortora R., Tovoli F., Vigano M., and Violi P.
- Abstract
Advances in the surgical and systemic therapeutic landscape of hepatocellular carcinoma have increased the complexity of patient management. A dynamic adaptation of the available staging-based algorithms is required to allow flexible therapeutic allocation. In particular, real-world hepatocellular carcinoma management increasingly relies on factors independent of oncological staging, including patients’ frailty, comorbid burden, critical tumour location, multiple liver functional parameters, and specific technical contraindications impacting the delivery of treatment and resource availability. In this Policy Review we critically appraise how treatment allocation strictly based on pretreatment staging features has shifted towards a more personalised treatment approach, in which expert tumour boards assume a central role. We propose an evidence-based framework for hepatocellular carcinoma treatment based on the novel concept of multiparametric therapeutic hierarchy, in which different therapeutic options are ordered according to their survival benefit (ie, from surgery to systemic therapy). Moreover, we introduce the concept of converse therapeutic hierarchy, in which therapies are ordered according to their conversion abilities or adjuvant abilities (ie, from systemic therapy to surgery).
- Published
- 2023
3. Kidney Transplantation in Elderly Recipients: A Single-Center Experience
- Author
-
Adani, G.L., Baccarani, U., Crestale, S., Pravisani, R., Isola, M., Tulissi, P., Vallone, C., Nappi, R., and Risaliti, A.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Splenic Artery Syndrome as a Possible Cause of Late Onset Refractory Ascites After Liver Transplantation: Management With Proximal Splenic Artery Embolization
- Author
-
Pravisani, R., Baccarani, U., Adani, G., Lorenzin, D., Vit, A., Cherchi, V., Calandra, S., Rispoli, I., Toniutto, P., Sponza, M., and Risaliti, A.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The role of antiplatelet therapies on incidence and mortality of hepatocellular carcinoma
- Author
-
Lai, Q., De Matthaeis, N., Finotti, M., Galati, G., Marrone, G., Melandro, F., Morisco, F., Nicolini, D., Pravisani, R., Giannini, E. G., Aglitti, A., Aliberti, C., Baccarani, U., Bhoori, S., Borzio, M., Brancaccio, G., Burra, P., Cabibbo, G., Casadei Gardini, A., Carrai, P., Cillo, U., Conti, F., Cucchetti, A., D'Ambrosio, R., Dell'Unto, C., Di Costanzo, G. G., Di Sandro, S., Foschi, F. G., Fucilli, F., Gambato, M., Gasbarrini, A., Giuliante, F., Ghinolfi, D., Grieco, A., Gruttaduria, S., Guarino, M., Kostandini, A., Iavarone, M., Lenci, I., Levi Sandri, G. B., Losito, F., Lupo, L. G., Manzia, T. M., Mazzocato, S., Mescoli, C., Miele, L., Muley, M., Persico, M., Plaz Torres, M. C., Pompili, M., Ponziani, F. R., Rapaccini, G. L., Rendina, M., Renzulli, M., Rossi, M., Rreka, E., Russo, F. P., Sacco, R., Sangiovanni, A., Sessa, A., Simonetti, N., Sposito, C., Tortora, R., Trevisani, F., Vigano, L., Vigano, M., Villa, E., Vincenzi, V., Violi, P., and Vitale, A.
- Subjects
clopidogrel ,aspirin ,Clinical Biochemistry ,incidence ,occurrence ,survival ,General Medicine ,Biochemistry ,Settore MED/18 - Abstract
To evaluate the impact of antiplatelet therapy (APT)on the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and mortality following its treatment.A systematic literature search was performed using PubMed and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials Databases. Two HCC clinical settings were explored: (i) incidence, and (ii) death after any HCC treatment. Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) were calculated to compare the pooled data between patients who received or did not receive APT.A total of 20 studies were identified, of whom 15 focused on HCC incidence, including 2,685,009 patients, and five on post-treatment death, including 3281 patients. APT was associated with an overall reduced risk of HCC incidence (OR: 0.63; 95%CI = 0.51-0.79; p 0.001) as well as of post-treatment mortality (OR: 0.54; 95%CI = 0.35-0.83; p = 0.006).Current data suggest that APT correlated with higher HCC incidence and poor overall survival following tumour treatment.
- Published
- 2023
6. Refining Auxiliary Partial Orthotopic Liver Transplantation (APOLT) for Acute Liver Failure in 48 Adult Patients
- Author
-
Pravisani, R., primary, Cocchi, L., additional, Cesaretti, M., additional, Dondero, F., additional, Sepulveda, A., additional, Weiss, E., additional, Francoz, C., additional, Roux, O., additional, Durand, F., additional, Lesurtel, M., additional, and Dokmak, S., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Distal Pancreatectomy for Body-pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma: Is Splenectomy Necessary?
- Author
-
Codjia, T., primary, Hobeika, C., additional, Platevoet, P., additional, Pravisani, R., additional, Dokmak, S., additional, Aussilhou, B., additional, Marique, L., additional, Cros, J., additional, Cauchy, F., additional, Lesurtel, M., additional, and Sauvanet, A., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Overview of Prognostic Systems for Hepatocellular Carcinoma and ITA.LI.CA External Validation of MESH and CNLC Classifications
- Author
-
Vitale, A, Farinati, F, Finotti, M, Di Renzo, C, Brancaccio, G, Piscaglia, F, Cabibbo, G, Caturelli, E, Missale, G, Marra, F, Sacco, R, Giannini, Eg, Trevisani, F, Cillo, U, Bhoori, S, Borzio, M, Burra, P, Casadei Gardini, A, Carrai, P, Conti, F, Cozzolongo, R, Cucchetti, A, D'Ambrosio, R, Dell'Unto, C, De Matthaeis, N, Di Costanzo, Gg, Di Sandro, S, Famularo, S, Foschi, Fg, Fucilli, F, Galati, G, Gambato, M, Gasbarrini, A, Giuliante, F, Ghinolfi, D, Grieco, A, Gruttadauria, S, Guarino, M, Iavarone, M, Kostandini, A, Lai, Q, Lenci, I, Levi Sandri, Gv, Losito, F, Lupo, Lg, Marasco, G, Manzia, Tm, Mazzocato, S, Masarone, M, Melandro, F, Mescoli, C, Miele, L, Morisco, F, Muley, M, Nicolini, D, Pagano, D, Persico, M, Pompili, M, Ponziani, Fr, Pravisani, R, Rapaccini, Gl, Rendina, M, Renzulli, M, Romano, F, Rossi, M, Rreka, E, Russo, Fp, Sangiovanni, A, Sessa, A, Simonetti, N, Sposito, C, Tortora, R, Vigano, L, Vigano, M, Villa, E, Vincenzi, V, Violi, P, Azzaroli, F, Brunetto, Mr, Di Marco, A, Masotto, A, Mega, A, Nardone, G, Oliveri, F, Raimondo, G, Svegliati Baroni, G, Vidili, G, Zoli, M, Vitale A., Farinati F., Finotti M., Di Renzo C., Brancaccio G., Piscaglia F., Cabibbo G., Caturelli E., Missale G., Marra F., Sacco R., Giannini E.G., Trevisani F., Cillo U., Bhoori S., Borzio M., Burra P., Casadei Gardini A., Carrai P., Conti F., Cozzolongo R., Cucchetti A., D'ambrosio R., Dell'unto C., De Matthaeis N., Di Costanzo G.G., Di Sandro S., Famularo S., Foschi F.G., Fucilli F., Galati G., Gambato M., Gasbarrini A., Giuliante F., Ghinolfi D., Grieco A., Gruttadauria S., Guarino M., Iavarone M., Kostandini A., Lai Q., Lenci I., Levi Sandri G.V., Losito F., Lupo L.G., Marasco G., Manzia T.M., Mazzocato S., Masarone M., Melandro F., Mescoli C., Miele L., Morisco F., Muley M., Nicolini D., Pagano D., Persico M., Pompili M., Ponziani F.R., Pravisani R., Rapaccini G.L., Rendina M., Renzulli M., Romano F., Rossi M., Rreka E., Russo F.P., Sangiovanni A., Sessa A., Simonetti N., Sposito C., Tortora R., Vigano L., Vigano M., Villa E., Vincenzi V., Violi P., Azzaroli F., Brunetto M.R., Di Marco A., Masotto A., Mega A., Nardone G., Oliveri F., Raimondo G., Svegliati Baroni G., Vidili G., Zoli M., Vitale, A., Farinati, F., Finotti, M., Di Renzo, C., Brancaccio, G., Piscaglia, F., Cabibbo, G., Caturelli, E., Missale, G., Marra, F., Sacco, R., Giannini, E. G., Trevisani, F., Cillo, U., Bhoori, S., Borzio, M., Burra, P., Casadei Gardini, A., Carrai, P., Conti, F., Cozzolongo, R., Cucchetti, A., D'Ambrosio, R., Dell'Unto, C., De Matthaeis, N., Di Costanzo, G. G., Di Sandro, S., Famularo, S., Foschi, F. G., Fucilli, F., Galati, G., Gambato, M., Gasbarrini, A., Giuliante, F., Ghinolfi, D., Grieco, A., Gruttadauria, S., Guarino, M., Iavarone, M., Kostandini, A., Lai, Q., Lenci, I., Levi Sandri, G. V., Losito, F., Lupo, L. G., Marasco, G., Manzia, T. M., Mazzocato, S., Masarone, M., Melandro, F., Mescoli, C., Miele, L., Morisco, F., Muley, M., Nicolini, D., Pagano, D., Persico, M., Pompili, M., Ponziani, F. R., Pravisani, R., Rapaccini, G. L., Rendina, M., Renzulli, M., Romano, F., Rossi, M., Rreka, E., Russo, F. P., Sangiovanni, A., Sessa, A., Simonetti, N., Sposito, C., Tortora, R., Vigano, L., Vigano, M., Villa, E., Vincenzi, V., Violi, P., Azzaroli, F., Brunetto, M. R., Di Marco, A., Masotto, A., Mega, A., Nardone, G., Oliveri, F., Raimondo, G., Svegliati Baroni, G., Vidili, G., and Zoli, M.
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Review ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Prognostic score ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,In patient ,Medical physics ,Staging system ,monotonicity of gradients ,Settore MED/12 - Gastroenterologia ,discrimination ability ,hepatocellular carcinoma ,homogeneity ,prognostic performance ,prognostic system ,business.industry ,External validation ,Mono-tonicity of gradient ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Settore MED/18 ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,Population data ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,General health ,Liver dysfunction ,business - Abstract
Simple Summary This review proposes a comprehensive overview of the main prognostic systems for HCC classified as prognostic scores, staging systems, or combined systems. Prognostic systems for HCC are usually compared in terms of homogeneity, monotonicity of gradients, and discrimination ability. However, despite the great number of published studies comparing HCC prognostic systems, it is rather difficult to identify a system that could be universally accepted as the best prognostic scheme for all HCC patients encountered in clinical practice. In order to give a contribute in this topic, we conducted a study aimed at externally validate the MESH score and the CNLC classification using the ITA.LI.CA database. Abstract Prognostic assessment in patients with HCC remains an extremely difficult clinical task due to the complexity of this cancer where tumour characteristics interact with degree of liver dysfunction, patient general health status, and a large span of available treatment options. Several prognostic systems have been proposed in the last three decades, both from the Asian and European/North American countries. Prognostic scores, such as the CLIP score and the recent MESH score, have been generated on a solid statistical basis from real life population data, while staging systems, such as the BCLC scheme and the recent CNLC classification, have been created by experts according to recent HCC prognostic evidences from the literature. A third category includes combined prognostic systems that can be used both as prognostic scores and staging systems. A recent example is the ITA.LI.CA prognostic system including either a prognostic score and a simplified staging system. This review focuses first on an overview of the main prognostic systems for HCC classified according to the above three categories, and, second, on a comprehensive description of the methodology required for a correct comparison between different systems in terms of prognostic performance. In this second section the main studies in the literature comparing different prognostic systems are described in detail. Lastly, a formal comparison between the last prognostic systems proposed for each of the above three categories is performed using a large Italian database including 6882 HCC patients in order to concretely apply the comparison rules previously described.
- Published
- 2021
9. An Italian survey on the use of T-tube in liver transplantation: old habits die hard!
- Author
-
Pravisani, R, De Simone, P, Patrono, D, Lauterio, A, Cescon, M, Gringeri, E, Colledan, M, Di Benedetto, F, di Francesco, F, Antonelli, B, Manzia, T, Carraro, A, Vivarelli, M, Regalia, E, Vennarecci, G, Guglielmo, N, Cesaretti, M, Avolio, A, Valentini, M, Lai, Q, Baccarani, U, Pravisani R, De Simone P, Patrono D, Lauterio A, Cescon M, Gringeri E, Colledan M, Di Benedetto F, di Francesco F, Antonelli B, Manzia TM, Carraro A, Vivarelli M, Regalia E, Vennarecci G, Guglielmo N, Cesaretti M, Avolio AW, Valentini MF, Lai QRO, Baccarani U, Pravisani, R, De Simone, P, Patrono, D, Lauterio, A, Cescon, M, Gringeri, E, Colledan, M, Di Benedetto, F, di Francesco, F, Antonelli, B, Manzia, T, Carraro, A, Vivarelli, M, Regalia, E, Vennarecci, G, Guglielmo, N, Cesaretti, M, Avolio, A, Valentini, M, Lai, Q, Baccarani, U, Pravisani R, De Simone P, Patrono D, Lauterio A, Cescon M, Gringeri E, Colledan M, Di Benedetto F, di Francesco F, Antonelli B, Manzia TM, Carraro A, Vivarelli M, Regalia E, Vennarecci G, Guglielmo N, Cesaretti M, Avolio AW, Valentini MF, Lai QRO, and Baccarani U
- Abstract
There is enough clinical evidence that a T-tube use in biliary reconstruction at adult liver transplantation (LT) does not significantly modify the risk of biliary stricture/leak, and it may even sustain infective and metabolic complications. Thus, the policy on T-tube use has been globally changing, with progressive application of more restrictive selection criteria. However, there are no currently standardized indications in such change, and many LT Centers rely only on own experience and routine. A nation-wide survey was conducted among all the 20 Italian adult LT Centers to investigate the current policy on T-tube use. It was found that 20% of Centers completely discontinued the T-tube use, while 25% Centers used it routinely in all LT cases. The remaining 55% of Centers applied a selective policy, based on criteria of technical complexity of biliary reconstruction (72.7%), followed by low-quality graft (63.6%) and high-risk recipient (36.4%). A T-tube use > 50% of annual caseload was not associated with high-volume Center status (> 70 LT per year), an active pediatric or living-donor transplant program, or use of DCD grafts. Only 10/20 (50%) Centers identified T-tube as a potential risk factor for complications other than biliary stricture/leak. In these cases, the suspected pathogenic mechanism comprised bacterial colonization (70%), malabsorption (70%), interruption of the entero-hepatic bile-acid cycle (50%), biliary inflammation due to an indwelling catheter (40%) and gut microbiota changes (40%). In conclusion, the prevalence of T-tube use among the Italian LT Centers is still relatively high, compared to the European trend (33%), and the potential detrimental effect of T-tube, beyond biliary stricture/leak, seems to be somehow underestimated.
- Published
- 2021
10. Current practice with grafts with multiple renal arteries in kidney transplantation: role of the methylene blue in the lower pole
- Author
-
Cherchi, V., Baccarani, U., Ventin, M., Pravisani, R., Puggioni, A., Zanini, V., Lorenzin, D., Vetrugno, L., Risaliti, A., Terrosu, G., and Adani, G. L.
- Subjects
kidney polar arteries ,kidney transplantation ,methylene blue ,multiple renal arteries - Published
- 2022
11. Infrarenal versus supraceliac aorto-hepatic arterial revascularisation in adult liver transplantation: multicentre retrospective study
- Author
-
Vivarelli, M, Cacciaguerra, A, Lerut, J, Lanari, J, Conte, G, Pravisani, R, Lambrechts, J, Iesari, S, Ackenine, K, Nicolini, D, Cillo, U, Zanus, G, Colledan, M, Risaliti, A, Baccarani, U, Rogiers, X, Troisi, R, Montalti, R, Mocchegiani, F, Vivarelli M, Cacciaguerra AB, Lerut J, Lanari J, Conte G, Pravisani R, Lambrechts J, Iesari S, Ackenine K, Nicolini D, Cillo U, Zanus G, Colledan M, Risaliti A, Baccarani U, Rogiers X, Troisi RI, Montalti R, Mocchegiani F, Vivarelli, M, Cacciaguerra, A, Lerut, J, Lanari, J, Conte, G, Pravisani, R, Lambrechts, J, Iesari, S, Ackenine, K, Nicolini, D, Cillo, U, Zanus, G, Colledan, M, Risaliti, A, Baccarani, U, Rogiers, X, Troisi, R, Montalti, R, Mocchegiani, F, Vivarelli M, Cacciaguerra AB, Lerut J, Lanari J, Conte G, Pravisani R, Lambrechts J, Iesari S, Ackenine K, Nicolini D, Cillo U, Zanus G, Colledan M, Risaliti A, Baccarani U, Rogiers X, Troisi RI, Montalti R, and Mocchegiani F
- Abstract
When the standard arterial reconstruction is not feasible during liver transplantation (LT), aorto-hepatic arterial reconstruction (AHAR) can be the only solution to save the graft. AHAR can be performed on the infrarenal (IR) or supraceliac (SC) tract of the aorta, but the possible effect on outcome of selecting SC versus IR reconstruction is still unclear. One hundred and twenty consecutive patients who underwent liver transplantation with AHAR in six European centres between January 2003 and December 2018 were retrospectively analysed to ascertain whether the incidence of hepatic artery thrombosis (HAT) was influenced by the type of AHAR (IR-AHAR vs. SC-AHAR). In 56/120 (46.6%) cases, an IR anastomosis was performed, always using an interposition arterial conduit. In the other 64/120 (53.4%) cases, an SC anastomosis was performed; an arterial conduit was used in 45/64 (70.3%) cases. Incidence of early (<= 30 days) HAT was in 6.2% (4/64) in the SC-AHAR and 10.7% (6/56) IR-AHAR group (p = 0.512) whilst incidence of late HAT was significantly lower in the SC-AHAR group (4.7% (3/64) vs 19.6% (11/56) -p = 0.024). IR-AHAR was the only independent risk factor for HAT (exp[B] = 3.915; 95% CI 1.400-10.951;p = 0.009). When AHAR is necessary at liver transplantation, the use of the supraceliac aorta significantly reduces the incidence of hepatic artery thrombosis and should therefore be recommended whenever possible.
- Published
- 2020
12. Graft Aberrant Hepatic Arteries in Deceased Donor Liver Transplantation: The "One Liver, One Artery" Approach
- Author
-
Pravisani, R., primary, Sepulveda, A., additional, Cocchi, L., additional, Cauchy, F., additional, Dokmak, S., additional, Durand, F., additional, Weiss, E., additional, Dondero, F., additional, and Lesurtel, M., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Platelets and hepatocellular cancer: Bridging the bench to the clinics
- Author
-
Lai, aEmail Author, Q., Vitale, bEmail Author, A., Manzia, cEmail Author, T. M., Foschi, dEmail Author, F. G., Sandri, eEmail Author, G. B. L., Gambato, bEmail Author, M., Melandro, fEmail Author, F., Russo, bEmail Author, F. P., Miele, gEmail Author, L., Viganò, hEmail Author, L., Burra, bEmail Author, P., Giannini, iEmail Author, E. G., Aliberti, C., Baccarani, U., Bhoori, S., Borzio, M., Brancaccio, G., Cabibbo, G., Casadei, Gardini, Carrai, A., Cillo, P., Conti, U., Cucchetti, F., D’Ambrosio, A., Dell’Unto, R., Dematthaeis, C., Costanzo, Di, G. G., Di Sandro, S., Fucilli, F., Galati, G., Gasbarrini, A., Giuliante, F., Ghinolfi, D., Grieco, A., Gruttaduria, S., Guarino, M., Kostandini, A., Iavarone, M., Lenci, I., Losito, F., Lupo, L. G., Mazzocato, S., Mescoli, C., Miele, L., Morisco, F., Muley, M., Nicolini, D., Persico, M., Pompili, M., Ponziani, F. R., Pravisani, R., Rapaccini, G. L., Rendina, M., Renzulli, M., Rossi, M., Rreka, E., Sacco, R., Sangiovanni, A., Sessa, A., Simonetti, N., Sposito, C., Tortora, R., Trevisani, F., Viganò, M., Villa, E., Vincenzi, V., Violi, P., Associazione Italiana per lo Studio del Fegato (AISF) HCC Special Interest Group, Lai, Q., aEmail Author, Vitale, A., bEmail Author, Manzia, T. M., cEmail Author, Foschi, F. G., dEmail Author, Sandri, G. B. L., eEmail Author, Gambato, M., bEmail Author, Melandro, F., fEmail Author, Russo, F. P., bEmail Author, Miele, L., gEmail Author, Viganò, L., hEmail Author, Burra, P., bEmail Author, Giannini, E. G., iEmail Author, Aliberti, C., Baccarani, U., Bhoori, S., Borzio, M., Brancaccio, G., Cabibbo, G., Casadei, Gardini, A., Carrai, P., Cillo, U., Conti, F., Cucchetti, A., D’Ambrosio, R., Dell’Unto, C., Dematthaei, Di, Costanzo, G., G., Di Sandro, S., Fucilli, F., Galati, G., Gasbarrini, A., Giuliante, F., Ghinolfi, D., Grieco, A., Gruttaduria, S., Guarino, M., Kostandini, A., Iavarone, M., Lenci, I., Losito, F., Lupo, L. G., Mazzocato, S., Mescoli, C., Miele, L., Morisco, F., Muley, M., Nicolini, D., Persico, M., Pompili, M., Ponziani, F. R., Pravisani, R., Rapaccini, G. L., Rendina, M., Renzulli, M., Rossi, M., Rreka, E., Sacco, R., Sangiovanni, A., Sessa, A., Simonetti, N., Sposito, C., Tortora, R., Trevisani, F., Viganò, M., Villa, E., Vincenzi, V., Violi, P., Associazione Italiana per lo Studio del Fegato (AISF) HCC Special Interest, Group, Lai Q., Vitale A., Manzia T.M., Foschi F.G., Sandri G.B.L., Gambato M., Melandro F., Russo F.P., Miele L., Vigano L., Burra P., Giannini E.G., Aglitti A., Aliberti C., Baccarani U., Bhoori S., Borzio M., Brancaccio G., Cabibbo G., Casadei Gardini A., Carrai P., Cillo U., Conti F., Cucchetti A., D'ambrosio R., Dell'unto C., Dematthaeis N., Di Costanzo G.G., Di Sandro S., Fucilli F., Galati G., Gasbarrini A., Giuliante F., Ghinolfi D., Grieco A., Gruttaduria S., Guarino M., Kostandini A., Iavarone M., Lenci I., Losito F., Lupo L.G., Mazzocato S., Mescoli C., Morisco F., Muley M., Nicolini D., Persico M., Pompili M., Ponziani F.R., Pravisani R., Rapaccini G.L., Rendina M., Renzulli M., Rossi M., Rreka E., Sacco R., Sangiovanni A., Sessa A., Simonetti N., Sposito C., Tortora R., Trevisani F., Vigano M., Villa E., Vincenzi V., Violi P., Lai, Q., Vitale, A., Manzia, T. M., Foschi, F. G., Sandri, G. B. L., Gambato, M., Melandro, F., Russo, F. P., Vigano, L., Burra, P., Giannini, E. G., Casadei Gardini, A., Carrai, P., Cillo, U., Conti, F., Cucchetti, A., D'Ambrosio, R., Dell'Unto, C., Dematthaeis, N., Di Costanzo, G. G., and Vigano, M.
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Integrins ,Platelet-derived growth factor ,Endothelium ,Settore MED/12 - GASTROENTEROLOGIA ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Integrin ,Review ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio ,Selectins ,Vascular endothelial growth factor ,medicine ,Platelet ,Selectin ,business.industry ,Growth factor ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Extravasation ,Settore MED/01 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Tumor progression ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business - Abstract
Growing interest is recently being focused on the role played by the platelets in favoring hepatocellular cancer (HCC) growth and dissemination. The present review reports in detail both the experimental and clinical evidence published on this topic. Several growth factors and angiogenic molecules specifically secreted by platelets are directly connected with tumor progression and neo-angiogenesis. Among them, we can list the platelet-derived growth factor, the vascular endothelial growth factor, the endothelial growth factor, and serotonin. Platelets are also involved in tumor spread, favoring endothelium permeabilization and tumor cells' extravasation and survival in the bloodstream. From the bench to the clinics, all of these aspects were also investigated in clinical series, showing an evident correlation between platelet count and size of HCC, tumor biological behavior, metastatic spread, and overall survival rates. Moreover, a better understanding of the mechanisms involved in the platelet-tumor axis represents a paramount aspect for optimizing both current tumor treatment and development of new therapeutic strategies against HCC. Growing interest is recently being focused on the role played by the platelets in favoring hepatocellular cancer (HCC) growth and dissemination. The present review reports in detail both the experimental and clinical evidence published on this topic. Several growth factors and angiogenic molecules specifically secreted by platelets are directly connected with tumor progression and neo-angiogenesis. Among them, we can list the platelet-derived growth factor, the vascular endothelial growth factor, the endothelial growth factor, and serotonin. Platelets are also involved in tumor spread, favoring endothelium permeabilization and tumor cells’ extravasation and survival in the bloodstream. From the bench to the clinics, all of these aspects were also investigated in clinical series, showing an evident correlation between platelet count and size of HCC, tumor biological behavior, metastatic spread, and overall survival rates. Moreover, a better understanding of the mechanisms involved in the platelet–tumor axis represents a paramount aspect for optimizing both current tumor treatment and development of new therapeutic strategies against HCC.
- Published
- 2019
14. LIVER TRANSPLANTATION WITH SOVRACELIAC AORTO-HEPATIC VS INFRARENAL REVASCOLARIZATION: MULTICENTRIC RETROSPECTIVE STUDY
- Author
-
Cacciaguerra, A, Mocchegiani, F, Montalti, R, Conte, G, Iesari, S, Pravisani, R, Lanari, J, Colledan, M, Roberto, I, Risaliti, A, Cillo, U, Lerut, J, Vivarelli, M, Cacciaguerra AB, Mocchegiani F, Montalti R, Conte G, Iesari S, Pravisani R, Lanari J, Colledan M, Roberto IT, Risaliti A, Cillo U, Lerut J, Vivarelli M, Cacciaguerra, A, Mocchegiani, F, Montalti, R, Conte, G, Iesari, S, Pravisani, R, Lanari, J, Colledan, M, Roberto, I, Risaliti, A, Cillo, U, Lerut, J, Vivarelli, M, Cacciaguerra AB, Mocchegiani F, Montalti R, Conte G, Iesari S, Pravisani R, Lanari J, Colledan M, Roberto IT, Risaliti A, Cillo U, Lerut J, and Vivarelli M
- Published
- 2019
15. Surgical Complications Requiring an Early Relaparotomy in HIV-Infected Liver Transplant Recipients: Risk Factors and Impact on Survival
- Author
-
Pravisani, R, Baccarani, U, Isola, M, Mocchegiani, F, Lauterio, A, Righi, E, Magistri, P, Corno, V, Adani, G, Lorenzin, D, Di Sandro, S, Pagano, D, Bassetti, M, Gruttadauria, S, De Carlis, L, Vivarelli, M, Di Benedetto, F, Risaliti, A, Pravisani R., Baccarani U., Isola M., Mocchegiani F., Lauterio A., Righi E., Magistri P., Corno V., Adani G. L., Lorenzin D., Di Sandro S., Pagano D., Bassetti M., Gruttadauria S., De Carlis L., Vivarelli M., Di Benedetto F., Risaliti A., Pravisani, R, Baccarani, U, Isola, M, Mocchegiani, F, Lauterio, A, Righi, E, Magistri, P, Corno, V, Adani, G, Lorenzin, D, Di Sandro, S, Pagano, D, Bassetti, M, Gruttadauria, S, De Carlis, L, Vivarelli, M, Di Benedetto, F, Risaliti, A, Pravisani R., Baccarani U., Isola M., Mocchegiani F., Lauterio A., Righi E., Magistri P., Corno V., Adani G. L., Lorenzin D., Di Sandro S., Pagano D., Bassetti M., Gruttadauria S., De Carlis L., Vivarelli M., Di Benedetto F., and Risaliti A.
- Abstract
Aim: We aimed to analyze the risk factors for early surgical complications requiring relaparotomy and the related impact on overall survival (OS) in HIV-infected patients submitted to liver transplantation. Methods: We performed a retrospective study on a nationwide multicenter cohort of 157 HIV-infected patients submitted to liver transplantation in 6 Italian transplant units between 2004 to 2014. Results: The median preoperative model for end-stage liver disease score was 18 (interquartile range 12-26.5). An early relaparotomy was performed in 24.8% of patients, and the underlying clinical causes were biliary leak (8.2%), bleeding (8.2%), intestinal perforation (4.5%), and suspected vascular complications (3.8%). The OS at 1, 3, and 5 years was 74.3%, 68.0%, and 60.0%, respectively, and an early relaparotomy was not a prognostic factor itself, but an increasing number of relaparotomies was associated with decreased survival (hazard ratio = 1.40, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.07-1.81, P = .01). In the multivariate analysis, preoperative refractory ascites (odds ratio 3.32, 95% CI 1.18-6.47, P = .02) and Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy reconstruction (odds ratio 12.712, 95% CI 2.47-65.38, P ≤ .01) were identified as significant risk factors for early relaparotomy. Conclusions: In HIV-infected liver transplant recipients, an increasing number of early relaparotomies due to surgical complications did negatively affect the OS. Preoperative refractory ascites reflecting a severe portal hypertension and a difficult biliary tract reconstruction requiring a Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy were associated with an increased risk of early relaparotomy.
- Published
- 2019
16. Early post-liver transplant surgical morbidity in HIV-infected recipients: risk factor for overall survival? A nationwide retrospective study
- Author
-
Baccarani, U, Pravisani, R, Isola, M, Mocchegiani, F, Lauterio, A, Righi, E, Magistri, P, Corno, V, Adani, G, Lorenzin, D, Di Sandro, S, Pagano, D, Bassetti, M, Gruttadauria, S, Colledan, M, De Carlis, L, Vivarelli, M, Di Benedetto, F, Risaliti, A, Baccarani U., Pravisani R., Isola M., Mocchegiani F., Lauterio A., Righi E., Magistri P., Corno V., Adani G. L., Lorenzin D., Di Sandro S., Pagano D., Bassetti M., Gruttadauria S., Colledan M., De Carlis L., Vivarelli M., Di Benedetto F., Risaliti A., Baccarani, U, Pravisani, R, Isola, M, Mocchegiani, F, Lauterio, A, Righi, E, Magistri, P, Corno, V, Adani, G, Lorenzin, D, Di Sandro, S, Pagano, D, Bassetti, M, Gruttadauria, S, Colledan, M, De Carlis, L, Vivarelli, M, Di Benedetto, F, Risaliti, A, Baccarani U., Pravisani R., Isola M., Mocchegiani F., Lauterio A., Righi E., Magistri P., Corno V., Adani G. L., Lorenzin D., Di Sandro S., Pagano D., Bassetti M., Gruttadauria S., Colledan M., De Carlis L., Vivarelli M., Di Benedetto F., and Risaliti A.
- Abstract
The aim of the study was to analyse the risk factors for early surgical complications requiring relaparotomy and the related impact on overall survival (OS) in HIV-infected patients submitted to liver transplantation. Thus a retrospective investigation was conducted on a nationwide multicentre cohort of 157 HIV patients submitted to liver transplantation in six Italian Transplant Units between 2004 and 2014. An early relaparotomy was performed in 24.8% of cases and the underlying clinical causes were biliary leak (8.2%), bleeding (8.2%), intestinal perforation (4.5%) and suspect of vascular complications(3.8%). No differences in terms of prevalence for either overall or cause-specific early relaparotomies were noted when compared with a non-HIV control group, matched for MELD, recipient age, HCV-RNA positivity and HBV prevalence. While in the control group an early relaparotomy appeared a negative prognostic factor, such impact on OS was not noted in HIV recipients. Nonetheless increasing number of relaparotomies were associated with decreased survival. In multivariate analysis, preoperative refractory ascites and Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy reconstruction were significant risk factors for early relaparotomy. To conclude, in HIV liver transplanted patients, an increasing number of early relaparotomies because of surgical complications does negatively affect the OS. Preoperative refractory ascites reflecting a severe portal hypertension and a difficult biliary tract reconstruction requiring a Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy are associated with increased risk of early relaparotomy.
- Published
- 2019
17. A Simple Trick to Right Renal Vein Elongation in Deceased Donor Kidney Transplantation
- Author
-
Cherchi, V., Baccarani, U., Velkoski, J., Ventin, M., Pravisani, R., Lorenzin, D., Risaliti, A., Terrosu, G., Adani, G. L., and Transplant, E. C.
- Subjects
Deceased donor kidney ,Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Right renal vein ,kidney transplantation ,Kidney ,Renal Veins ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Text mining ,Living Donors ,Humans ,Medicine ,business ,Simple (philosophy) - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. LIVER TRANSPLANTATION WITH SOVRACELIAC AORTO-HEPATIC VS INFRARENAL REVASCOLARIZATION: MULTICENTRIC RETROSPECTIVE STUDY
- Author
-
Cacciaguerra AB, Mocchegiani F, Montalti R, Conte G, Iesari S, Pravisani R, Lanari J, Colledan M, Roberto IT, Risaliti A, Cillo U, Lerut J, Vivarelli M, Cacciaguerra, A, Mocchegiani, F, Montalti, R, Conte, G, Iesari, S, Pravisani, R, Lanari, J, Colledan, M, Roberto, I, Risaliti, A, Cillo, U, Lerut, J, and Vivarelli, M
- Subjects
LIVER TRANSPLANTATION - Published
- 2019
19. Different miRNA expression in transplanted livers of HCV mono-infected and HCV/HIV co-infected recipients
- Author
-
Baccarani, U, Bulfoni, M, Cesselli, D, Lorenzin, D, Marzinotto, S, Cherchi, V, Adani, Gl, Pravisani, R, Turetta, M, Beltrami, Ap, Righi, E, Terrosu, G, Okada, N, Bassetti, M, DI LORETO, Carla, Takatsuki, M, Eguchi, S, and Risaliti, A
- Published
- 2018
20. Elevated serum CA 19-9 level associated with a splenic cyst: which is the actual clinical management? Review of the literature
- Author
-
Bresadola, V., Pravisani, R., Terrosu, G., and Risaliti, A.
- Published
- 2015
21. Postsplenectomy recurrence of idiopathic thrombocitopenic purpura: role of laparoscopic splenectomy in the treatment of accessory spleen.
- Author
-
LEO, C. A., PRAVISANI, R., BIDINOST, S., BACCARANI, U., BRESADOLA, V., RISALITI, A., and TERROSU, G.
- Published
- 2015
22. Fatal hemoperitoneum due to bleeding from gallbladder varices in an end-stage cirrhotic patient A case report and review of the literature
- Author
-
Pravisani R, Bugiantella W, Lorenzin D, Bresadola V, and Cosimo Alex Leo
23. Infrarenal versus supraceliac aorto-hepatic arterial revascularisation in adult liver transplantation: multicentre retrospective study
- Author
-
Roberto Troisi, Michele Colledan, J. Lambrechts, Jan Lerut, Giacomo Zanus, Federico Mocchegiani, Kevin Ackenine, G. Conte, Roberto Montalti, Marco Vivarelli, Andrea Risaliti, Umberto Baccarani, A. Benedetti Cacciaguerra, J. Lanari, Samuele Iesari, Riccardo Pravisani, Daniele Nicolini, Xavier Rogiers, Umberto Cillo, Vivarelli, M., Benedetti Cacciaguerra, A., Lerut, J., Lanari, J., Conte, G., Pravisani, R., Lambrechts, J., Iesari, S., Ackenine, K., Nicolini, D., Cillo, U., Zanus, G., Colledan, M., Risaliti, A., Baccarani, U., Rogiers, X., Troisi, R. I., Montalti, R., Mocchegiani, F., UCL - SSS/IREC - Institut de recherche expérimentale et clinique, UCL - SSS/IREC/CHEX - Pôle de chirgurgie expérimentale et transplantation, UCL - (SLuc) Service de chirurgie et transplantation abdominale, Vivarelli, M, Cacciaguerra, A, Lerut, J, Lanari, J, Conte, G, Pravisani, R, Lambrechts, J, Iesari, S, Ackenine, K, Nicolini, D, Cillo, U, Zanus, G, Colledan, M, Risaliti, A, Baccarani, U, Rogiers, X, Troisi, R, Montalti, R, and Mocchegiani, F
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Aorto-hepatic arterial reconstruction ,Hepatic artery ,Hepatic artery thrombosis ,Iliac conduit ,Liver transplantation ,Vessel graft ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Surgical ,Aorta, Abdominal ,Aorta ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Anastomosis, Surgical ,Middle Aged ,Hepatic artery thrombosi ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Vascular Surgical Procedures ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Anastomosis ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,Abdominal ,Reconstructive Surgical Procedures ,Risk factor ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Thrombosis ,Retrospective cohort study ,Plastic Surgery Procedures ,Surgery ,Transplantation ,Hepatic Artery ,Liver Transplantation ,business - Abstract
When the standard arterial reconstruction is not feasible during liver transplantation (LT), aorto-hepatic arterial reconstruction (AHAR) can be the only solution to save the graft. AHAR can be performed on the infrarenal (IR) or supraceliac (SC) tract of the aorta, but the possible effect on outcome of selecting SC versus IR reconstruction is still unclear. One hundred and twenty consecutive patients who underwent liver transplantation with AHAR in six European centres between January 2003 and December 2018 were retrospectively analysed to ascertain whether the incidence of hepatic artery thrombosis (HAT) was influenced by the type of AHAR (IR-AHAR vs. SC-AHAR). In 56/120 (46.6%) cases, an IR anastomosis was performed, always using an interposition arterial conduit. In the other 64/120 (53.4%) cases, an SC anastomosis was performed; an arterial conduit was used in 45/64 (70.3%) cases. Incidence of early (
- Published
- 2020
24. An Italian survey on the use of T-tube in liver transplantation: old habits die hard!
- Author
-
Alfonso Wolfango Avolio, Amedeo Carraro, Michele Colledan, Fabrizio Di Benedetto, Giovanni Vennarecci, Tommaso Maria Manzia, Quirino Lai, Marco Vivarelli, Andrea Lauterio, Enrico Gringeri, Fabrizio di Francesco, Paolo De Simone, B. Antonelli, Umberto Baccarani, Manuela Cesaretti, Enrico Regalia, Riccardo Pravisani, Matteo Cescon, Damiano Patrono, Maria Filippa Valentini, Nicola Guglielmo, Pravisani, R, De Simone, P, Patrono, D, Lauterio, A, Cescon, M, Gringeri, E, Colledan, M, Di Benedetto, F, di Francesco, F, Antonelli, B, Manzia, T, Carraro, A, Vivarelli, M, Regalia, E, Vennarecci, G, Guglielmo, N, Cesaretti, M, Avolio, A, Valentini, M, Lai, Q, and Baccarani, U
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Malabsorption ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Bile acid ,Liver transplantation ,Biliary complications ,Habits ,Bacterial colonization ,Postoperative Complications ,Risk Factors ,Indwelling catheter ,medicine ,Living Donors ,Humans ,Survey ,Child ,Bile acids ,T-tube ,Retrospective Studies ,Potential risk ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Settore MED/18 ,Surgery ,Liver Transplantation ,Transplantation ,Italy ,Clinical evidence ,Biliary complication ,Original Article ,Adult liver ,business - Abstract
There is enough clinical evidence that a T-tube use in biliary reconstruction at adult liver transplantation (LT) does not significantly modify the risk of biliary stricture/leak, and it may even sustain infective and metabolic complications. Thus, the policy on T-tube use has been globally changing, with progressive application of more restrictive selection criteria. However, there are no currently standardized indications in such change, and many LT Centers rely only on own experience and routine. A nation-wide survey was conducted among all the 20 Italian adult LT Centers to investigate the current policy on T-tube use. It was found that 20% of Centers completely discontinued the T-tube use, while 25% Centers used it routinely in all LT cases. The remaining 55% of Centers applied a selective policy, based on criteria of technical complexity of biliary reconstruction (72.7%), followed by low-quality graft (63.6%) and high-risk recipient (36.4%). A T-tube use > 50% of annual caseload was not associated with high-volume Center status (> 70 LT per year), an active pediatric or living-donor transplant program, or use of DCD grafts. Only 10/20 (50%) Centers identified T-tube as a potential risk factor for complications other than biliary stricture/leak. In these cases, the suspected pathogenic mechanism comprised bacterial colonization (70%), malabsorption (70%), interruption of the entero-hepatic bile-acid cycle (50%), biliary inflammation due to an indwelling catheter (40%) and gut microbiota changes (40%). In conclusion, the prevalence of T-tube use among the Italian LT Centers is still relatively high, compared to the European trend (33%), and the potential detrimental effect of T-tube, beyond biliary stricture/leak, seems to be somehow underestimated.
- Published
- 2021
25. Early post-liver transplant surgical morbidity in HIV-infected recipients: risk factor for overall survival? A nationwide retrospective study
- Author
-
Paolo Magistri, Stefano Di Sandro, Fabrizio Di Benedetto, Andrea Risaliti, Riccardo Pravisani, Elda Righi, Matteo Bassetti, Federico Mocchegiani, Salvatore Gruttadauria, Gian Luigi Adani, V. Corno, Andrea Lauterio, Umberto Baccarani, Marco Vivarelli, Luciano De Carlis, Dario Lorenzin, Miriam Isola, Michele Colledan, Duilio Pagano, Baccarani, U, Pravisani, R, Isola, M, Mocchegiani, F, Lauterio, A, Righi, E, Magistri, P, Corno, V, Adani, G, Lorenzin, D, Di Sandro, S, Pagano, D, Bassetti, M, Gruttadauria, S, Colledan, M, De Carlis, L, Vivarelli, M, Di Benedetto, F, and Risaliti, A
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,complications ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Perforation (oil well) ,complication ,HIV Infections ,030230 surgery ,Liver transplantation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Postoperative Complications ,Internal medicine ,Overall survival ,Medicine ,Humans ,HIV Infection ,Risk factor ,Retrospective Studies ,Transplantation ,human immunodeficiency virus ,liver transplantation ,relaparotomy ,Female ,Liver Transplantation ,Middle Aged ,business.industry ,human immunodeficiency viru ,HIV ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Human Immunodeficiency Virus ,Cohort ,Portal hypertension ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Postoperative Complication ,business ,Human - Abstract
The aim of the study was to analyse the risk factors for early surgical complications requiring relaparotomy and the related impact on overall survival (OS) in HIV-infected patients submitted to liver transplantation. Thus a retrospective investigation was conducted on a nationwide multicentre cohort of 157 HIV patients submitted to liver transplantation in six Italian Transplant Units between 2004 and 2014. An early relaparotomy was performed in 24.8% of cases and the underlying clinical causes were biliary leak (8.2%), bleeding (8.2%), intestinal perforation (4.5%) and suspect of vascular complications(3.8%). No differences in terms of prevalence for either overall or cause-specific early relaparotomies were noted when compared with a non-HIV control group, matched for MELD, recipient age, HCV-RNA positivity and HBV prevalence. While in the control group an early relaparotomy appeared a negative prognostic factor, such impact on OS was not noted in HIV recipients. Nonetheless increasing number of relaparotomies were associated with decreased survival. In multivariate analysis, preoperative refractory ascites and Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy reconstruction were significant risk factors for early relaparotomy. To conclude, in HIV liver transplanted patients, an increasing number of early relaparotomies because of surgical complications does negatively affect the OS. Preoperative refractory ascites reflecting a severe portal hypertension and a difficult biliary tract reconstruction requiring a Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy are associated with increased risk of early relaparotomy.
- Published
- 2019
26. Surgical Complications Requiring an Early Relaparotomy in HIV-Infected Liver Transplant Recipients: Risk Factors and Impact on Survival
- Author
-
Marco Vivarelli, Umberto Baccarani, Miriam Isola, Andrea Lauterio, Andrea Risaliti, Salvatore Gruttadauria, Gian Luigi Adani, Luciano De Carlis, Duilio Pagano, Paolo Magistri, Matteo Bassetti, Stefano Di Sandro, Dario Lorenzin, Fabrizio Di Benedetto, Federico Mocchegiani, V. Corno, Riccardo Pravisani, Elda Righi, Pravisani, R, Baccarani, U, Isola, M, Mocchegiani, F, Lauterio, A, Righi, E, Magistri, P, Corno, V, Adani, G, Lorenzin, D, Di Sandro, S, Pagano, D, Bassetti, M, Gruttadauria, S, De Carlis, L, Vivarelli, M, Di Benedetto, F, and Risaliti, A
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Perforation (oil well) ,HIV Infections ,Liver transplantation ,Liver disease ,Postoperative Complications ,Interquartile range ,Retrospective Studie ,Risk Factors ,Medicine ,Humans ,HIV Infection ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Retrospective Studies ,Transplantation ,Laparotomy ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Risk Factor ,Retrospective cohort study ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Female ,Liver Transplantation ,Proportional Hazards Model ,Portal hypertension ,Postoperative Complication ,business ,Human - Abstract
Aim We aimed to analyze the risk factors for early surgical complications requiring relaparotomy and the related impact on overall survival (OS) in HIV-infected patients submitted to liver transplantation. Methods We performed a retrospective study on a nationwide multicenter cohort of 157 HIV-infected patients submitted to liver transplantation in 6 Italian transplant units between 2004 to 2014. Results The median preoperative model for end-stage liver disease score was 18 (interquartile range 12-26.5). An early relaparotomy was performed in 24.8% of patients, and the underlying clinical causes were biliary leak (8.2%), bleeding (8.2%), intestinal perforation (4.5%), and suspected vascular complications (3.8%). The OS at 1, 3, and 5 years was 74.3%, 68.0%, and 60.0%, respectively, and an early relaparotomy was not a prognostic factor itself, but an increasing number of relaparotomies was associated with decreased survival (hazard ratio = 1.40, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.07-1.81, P = .01). In the multivariate analysis, preoperative refractory ascites (odds ratio 3.32, 95% CI 1.18-6.47, P = .02) and Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy reconstruction (odds ratio 12.712, 95% CI 2.47-65.38, P ≤ .01) were identified as significant risk factors for early relaparotomy. Conclusions In HIV-infected liver transplant recipients, an increasing number of early relaparotomies due to surgical complications did negatively affect the OS. Preoperative refractory ascites reflecting a severe portal hypertension and a difficult biliary tract reconstruction requiring a Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy were associated with an increased risk of early relaparotomy.
- Published
- 2019
27. The role of the comprehensive complication index in the prediction of tumor-related death in transplanted patients with hepatocellular carcinoma.
- Author
-
Lai Q, Melandro F, Vitale A, Ghinolfi D, Coubeau L, Pravisani R, Nowak G, Mocchegiani F, Vivarelli M, Rossi M, Ericzon BG, Baccarani U, De Simone P, Cillo U, and Lerut J
- Abstract
Liver transplantation (LT) is the primary treatment for selected patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). However, HCC-related mortality post-LT remains a significant concern, with up to 10% of cases reported in international series. Identifying risk factors for adverse clinical outcomes is essential. We hypothesized that post-LT HCC-related mortality rates are higher in patients with a high (≥ 42) Comprehensive Complication Index (CCI) calculated at discharge. This study aims to compare post-LT HCC-related mortality rates between two groups of patients with high versus low CCI following LT for HCC. This study included data from seven collaborative European centers. A cohort of 1121 HCC patients transplanted between 2005 and 2019, surviving more than six months post-LT, was analyzed retrospectively. Patients were divided into two groups based on the CCI at discharge: Low-CCI Group (n = 942, 84.0%) and High-CCI Group (n = 179, 16.0%). An inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) approach was applied for analysis. In the post-IPTW cohort, four multivariable logistic regression models with mixed effects identified independent risk factors for HCC-related death, overall death, recurrence, and early recurrence. A CCI score of ≥ 42 emerged as an independent risk factor across all models. Specifically, CCI ≥ 42 was associated with increased odds of HCC-related death (OR = 3.35; P < 0.0001), overall death (OR = 2.63; P < 0.0001), overall recurrence (OR = 2.09; P = 0.001), and early recurrence (OR = 1.88; P = 0.02). A CCI score at discharge should be considered a critical factor for recurrence and HCC-related mortality risk. Incorporating CCI into standard post-LT predictive models may enhance prognostic accuracy for adverse HCC outcomes., Competing Interests: Declarations. Conflict of interest: All authors certify that they have NO affiliations with or involvement in any organization or entity with any financial or non-financial interest in the subject matter or materials discussed in this manuscript. Ethical approval: Local Ethics Board of Sapienza University of Rome. Consent to participate: All patients signed the consent for the treatment of their clinical and personal data. Consent for publication: All patients signed the consent for the anonymous publication of their clinical and personal data., (© 2025. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Recipient hepatectomy technique may affect oncological outcomes of liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma.
- Author
-
Pravisani R, De Martino M, Mocchegiani F, Melandro F, Patrono D, Lauterio A, Di Francesco F, Ravaioli M, Zambelli MF, Bosio C, Dondossola D, Lai Q, Zanchetta M, Dingfelder J, Toti L, Iacomino A, Nicolae S, Ghinolfi D, Romagnoli R, De Carlis L, Gruttadauria S, Cescon M, Colledan M, Carraro A, Caccamo L, Vivarelli M, Rossi M, Nadalin S, Gyori G, Tisone G, Vennarecci G, Rostved A, De Simone P, Isola M, and Baccarani U
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Europe epidemiology, Risk Factors, Aged, Vena Cava, Inferior surgery, Vena Cava, Inferior pathology, Adult, Liver surgery, Liver pathology, Liver blood supply, Liver Transplantation adverse effects, Liver Transplantation methods, Liver Transplantation statistics & numerical data, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular surgery, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular pathology, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular mortality, Liver Neoplasms surgery, Liver Neoplasms pathology, Liver Neoplasms mortality, Hepatectomy adverse effects, Hepatectomy methods, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local prevention & control
- Abstract
To date, caval sparing (CS) and total caval replacement (TCR) for recipient hepatectomy in liver transplantation (LT) have been compared only in terms of surgical morbidity. Nonetheless, the CS technique is inherently associated with an increased manipulation of the native liver and later exclusion of the venous outflow, which may increase the risk of intraoperative shedding of tumor cells when LT is performed for HCC. A multicenter, retrospective study was performed to assess the impact of recipient hepatectomy (CS vs. TCR) on the risk of posttransplant HCC recurrence among 16 European transplant centers that used either TCR or CS recipient hepatectomy as an elective protocol technique. Exclusion criteria comprised cases of non-center-protocol recipient hepatectomy technique, living-donor LT, HCC diagnosis suspected on preoperative imaging but not confirmed at the pathological examination of the explanted liver, HCC in close contact with the IVC, and previous liver resection for HCC. In 2420 patients, CS and TCR approaches were used in 1452 (60%) and 968 (40%) cases, respectively. Group adjustment with inverse probability weighting was performed for high-volume center, recipient age, alcohol abuse, viral hepatitis, Child-Pugh class C, Model for End-Stage Liver Disease score, cold ischemia time, clinical HCC stage within Milan criteria, pre-LT downstaging/bridging therapies, pre-LT alphafetoprotein serum levels, number and size of tumor nodules, microvascular invasion, and complete necrosis of all tumor nodules (matched cohort, TCR, n = 938; CS, n = 935). In a multivariate cause-specific hazard model, CS was associated with a higher risk of HCC recurrence (HR: 1.536, p = 0.007). In conclusion, TCR recipient hepatectomy, compared to the CS approach, may be associated with some protective effect against post-LT tumor recurrence., (Copyright © 2024 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Genome-wide DNA methylation and transcriptomic analysis of liver tissues subjected to early ischemia/reperfusion injury upon human liver transplantation.
- Author
-
Giraudi PJ, Laraño AA, Monego SD, Pravisani R, Bonazza D, Gondolesi G, Tiribelli C, Baralle F, Baccarani U, and Licastro D
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Transcriptome, Adult, Aged, Liver Transplantation adverse effects, Reperfusion Injury genetics, Reperfusion Injury metabolism, DNA Methylation, Liver metabolism, Liver pathology, Epigenesis, Genetic, Gene Expression Profiling methods
- Abstract
Introduction and Objectives: Epigenetic changes represent a mechanism connecting external stresses with long-term modifications of gene expression programs. In solid organ transplantation, ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) appears to induce epigenomic changes in the graft, although the currently available data are extremely limited. The present study aimed to characterize variations in DNA methylation and their effects on the transcriptome in liver transplantation from brain-dead donors., Patients and Methods: 12 liver grafts were evaluated through serial biopsies at different timings in the procurement-transplantation process: T0 (warm procurement, in donor), T1 (bench surgery), and T2 (after reperfusion, in recipient). DNA methylation (DNAm) and transcriptome profiles of biopsies were analyzed using microarrays and RNAseq., Results: Significant variations in DNAm were identified, particularly between T2 and T0. Functional enrichment of the best 1000 ranked differentially methylated promoters demonstrated that 387 hypermethylated and 613 hypomethylated promoters were involved in spliceosomal assembly and response to biotic stimuli, and inflammatory immune responses, respectively. At the transcriptome level, T2 vs. T0 showed an upregulation of 337 and downregulation of 61 genes, collectively involved in TNF-α, NFKB, and interleukin signaling. Cell enrichment analysis individuates macrophages, monocytes, and neutrophils as the most significant tissue-cell type in the response., Conclusions: In the process of liver graft procurement-transplantation, IRI induces significant epigenetic changes that primarily act on the signaling pathways of inflammatory responses dependent on TNF-α, NFKB, and interleukins. Our DNAm datasets are the early IRI methylome literature and will serve as a launch point for studying the impact of epigenetic modification in IRI., Competing Interests: Conflicts of interest None., (Copyright © 2024 Fundación Clínica Médica Sur, A.C. Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Distal Pancreatectomy for Body Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma: Is Splenectomy Necessary? A Propensity Score Matched Study.
- Author
-
Codjia T, Hobeika C, Platevoet P, Pravisani R, Dokmak S, Aussilhou B, Marique L, Cros J, Cauchy F, Lesurtel M, and Sauvanet A
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Survival Rate, Follow-Up Studies, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Postoperative Complications, Pancreatectomy methods, Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal surgery, Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal pathology, Pancreatic Neoplasms surgery, Pancreatic Neoplasms pathology, Propensity Score, Splenectomy methods
- Abstract
Background: The value of splenectomy for body localization (≥ 5 cm from spleen hilum) of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (B-PDAC) is uncertain. This study assessed spleen-preserving distal pancreatectomy (SPDP) results for B-PDAC., Patients and Methods: This single-center study included patients who underwent SPDP (Warshaw's technique) or distal splenopancreactomy (DSP) for B-PDAC from 2008 to 2019. Propensity score matching was performed to balance SPDP and DSP patients regarding sex, age, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), body mass index (BMI), laparoscopy, pathological features [American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC)/tumor node metastasis classification (TNM)], margins, and neoadjuvant/adjuvant therapies., Results: A total of 129 patients (64 male, median age 68 years, median BMI 24 kg/m
2 ) were enrolled with a median follow-up of 63 months (95% CI 52-96 months), including 59 (46%) SPDP and 70 (54%) DSP patients. A total of 39 SPDP patients were matched to 39 DSP patients. SPDP patients had fewer harvested nodes (19 vs 22; p = 0.038) with a similar number of positive nodes (0 vs 0; p = 0.237). R0 margins were achieved similarly in SPDP and DSP patients (75% vs 71%; p = 0.840). SPDP patients were associated with decreased comprehensive complication index (CCI, 8.7 vs 16.6; p = 0.004), rates of grade B/C postoperative pancreatic fistula (POPF, 14% vs 29%; p = 0.047), and hospital stay (11 vs 16 days; p < 0.001). SPDP patients experienced similar disease-free survival (DFS, 5 years: 38% vs 32%; p = 0.180) and overall survival (OS, 5 years 54% vs 44%; p = 0.710). After matching, SPDP patients remained associated with lower CCI (p = 0.034) and hospital stay (p = 0.028) while not associated with risks of local recurrence (HR 0.85; 95% CI 0.28-2.62; p = 0.781), recurrence (HR 1.04; 95% CI 0.61-1.78; p = 0.888), or death (HR 1.20; 95% CI 0.68-2.11; p = 0.556)., Conclusion: SPDP for B-PDAC is associated with less postoperative morbidity than DSP, without impairing oncological outcomes., (© 2024. Society of Surgical Oncology.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Refining Auxiliary Orthotopic Liver Transplantation (AOLT) Improves Outcomes in Adult Patients With Acute Liver Failure.
- Author
-
Pravisani R, Cocchi L, Cesaretti M, Dondero F, Sepulveda A, Farges O, Weiss E, Vilgrain V, Francoz C, Roux O, Belghiti J, Durand F, Lesurtel M, and Dokmak S
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Retrospective Studies, Hepatic Artery, Liver Transplantation methods, Liver Failure, Acute surgery
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate whether and how experience accumulation and technical refinements simultaneously implemented in auxiliary orthotopic liver transplantation (AOLT) may impact on outcomes., Background: AOLT for acute liver failure (ALF) provides the unique chance of complete immunosuppression withdrawal after adequate native liver remnant regeneration but is a technically demanding procedure. Our department is a reference center for ALF and an early adopter of AOLT., Methods: This is a single-center retrospective before/after study of a prospectively maintained cohort of 48 patients with ALF who underwent AOLT between 1993 and 2019. In 2012, technical refinements were implemented to improve outcomes: (i) favoring the volume of the graft rather than that of the native liver, (ii) direct anastomosis of graft hepatic artery with recipient right hepatic artery instead of the use of large size vessels, (iii) end-to-side hepaticocholedocostomy instead of bilioenteric anastomosis. Early experience (1993-2011) group (n=26) and recent experience (2012-2019) group (n=22) were compared. Primary endpoint was 90-day severe morbidity rate (Clavien-Dindo≥IIIa) and secondary endpoints were overall patient survival and complete immunosuppression withdrawal rates., Results: Compared with the earlier experience group, the recent experience group was associated with a lower severe complication rate (27% vs 65%, P <0.001), as well as less biliary (18% vs 54%, P =0.017) and arterial (0% vs 15%, P =0.115) complications. The 1-, 3-, and 5-year patient survival was significantly improved (91%, 91%, 91% vs 76%, 61%, 60%, P =0.045). The rate of complete immunosuppression withdrawal increased to 94% vs 70%, ( P =0.091) with no need of long-term graft explant., Conclusion: These technical refinements favoring the liver graft and reducing morbidity may promote AOLT implementation among LT centers., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Endothelial autophagy is not required for liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy in mice with fatty liver.
- Author
-
Hammoutene A, Tanguy M, Calmels M, Pravisani R, Albuquerque M, Casteleyn C, Slimani L, Sadoine J, Boulanger CM, Paradis V, Gilgenkrantz H, and Rautou PE
- Subjects
- Mice, Animals, Hepatectomy methods, Liver Regeneration, Endothelial Cells metabolism, Liver metabolism, Diet, High-Fat, Choline metabolism, Methionine metabolism, Autophagy, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Disease Models, Animal, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease metabolism, Focal Nodular Hyperplasia
- Abstract
Background & Aims: Patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) have impaired liver regeneration. Liver endothelial cells play a key role in liver regeneration. In non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), liver endothelial cells display a defect in autophagy, contributing to NASH progression. We aimed to determine the role of endothelial autophagy in liver regeneration following liver resection in NAFLD., Methods: First, we assessed autophagy in primary endothelial cells from wild type mice fed a high fat diet and subjected to partial hepatectomy. Then, we assessed liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy in mice deficient (Atg5
lox/lox ;VE-cadherin-Cre+ ) or not (Atg5lox/lox ) in endothelial autophagy and fed a high fat diet. The role of endothelial autophagy in liver regeneration was also assessed in ApoE-/- hypercholesterolemic mice and in mice with NASH induced by methionine- and choline-deficient diet., Results: First, autophagy (LC3II/protein) was strongly increased in liver endothelial cells following hepatectomy. Then, we observed at 40 and 48 h and at 7 days after partial hepatectomy, that Atg5lox/lox ;VE-cadherin-Cre+ mice fed a high fat diet had similar liver weight, plasma AST, ALT and albumin concentration, and liver protein expression of proliferation (PCNA), cell-cycle (Cyclin D1, BrdU incorporation, phospho-Histone H3) and apoptosis markers (cleaved Caspase-3) as Atg5lox/lox mice fed a high fat diet. Same results were obtained in ApoE-/- and methionine- and choline-deficient diet fed mice, 40 h after hepatectomy., Conclusion: These results demonstrate that the defect in endothelial autophagy occurring in NASH does not account for the impaired liver regeneration occurring in this setting., (© 2023 The Authors. Liver International published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Association between artificial nutrition in brain dead donors and early allograft function in liver transplant recipients: an observational study.
- Author
-
Cherchi V, Vetrugno L, Terrosu G, Deana C, Ventin M, Zanini V, Barbariol F, Pravisani R, Bove T, Risaliti A, Lorenzin D, and Baccarani U
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Brain Death, Tissue Donors, Allografts, Graft Survival, Liver Transplantation, Tissue and Organ Procurement
- Abstract
Background: The role of nutrition in donor after brain deaths (DBDs) has yet to be adequately discussed. The primary aim of this study was to investigate whether the nutritional intake in the 48 h before organ retrieval may play a role on the graft functional recovery assessed with Model for Early Allograft Function (MEAF) Score., Methods: Single-center retrospective study evaluating all liver transplants performed at the University Hospital of Udine from January 2010 to August 2020. Patients receiving grafts from DBD donors fed with artificial enteral nutrition in the 48 h prior to organ procurement (EN-group) or who did not (No-EN-group). Caloric debt was calculated using the difference between the calculated caloric needs and the effective calories delivered through enteral nutrition., Results: Livers from EN-group presented a lower mean MEAF score compared to the no-EN-group: 3.39 ± 1.46 versus 4.15 ± 1.51, respectively (p = .04). A positive correlation between caloric debt and the MEAF score was found within the overall population (r = .227, p = .043) as well as in EN-group (r = .306, p = .049)., Conclusions: Donor's nutritional intake in the final 48 h before organ procurement correlates with MEAF score, and nutrition probably plays a positive role on the functional recovery of the graft. Large future randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm this preliminary results., (© 2023 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Reply: Aberrant arteries-1 may be better than 2 for the liver, but maybe not the bile duct.
- Author
-
Pravisani R, Sepulveda A, Cocchi L, de Mello E, Cauchy F, Dokmak S, Farges O, Durand F, Weiss E, Dondero F, and Lesurtel M
- Subjects
- Humans, Bile Ducts surgery, Liver diagnostic imaging, Liver surgery, Arteries, Liver Transplantation
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The role of antiplatelet therapies on incidence and mortality of hepatocellular carcinoma.
- Author
-
Lai Q, De Matthaeis N, Finotti M, Galati G, Marrone G, Melandro F, Morisco F, Nicolini D, Pravisani R, and Giannini EG
- Subjects
- Humans, Incidence, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular epidemiology, Liver Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Aim: To evaluate the impact of antiplatelet therapy (APT)on the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and mortality following its treatment., Methods: A systematic literature search was performed using PubMed and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials Databases. Two HCC clinical settings were explored: (i) incidence, and (ii) death after any HCC treatment. Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) were calculated to compare the pooled data between patients who received or did not receive APT., Results: A total of 20 studies were identified, of whom 15 focused on HCC incidence, including 2,685,009 patients, and five on post-treatment death, including 3281 patients. APT was associated with an overall reduced risk of HCC incidence (OR: 0.63; 95%CI = 0.51-0.79; p < 0.001) as well as of post-treatment mortality (OR: 0.54; 95%CI = 0.35-0.83; p = 0.006)., Conclusions: Current data suggest that APT correlated with higher HCC incidence and poor overall survival following tumour treatment., (© 2022 The Authors. European Journal of Clinical Investigation published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Stichting European Society for Clinical Investigation Journal Foundation.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Graft aberrant hepatic arteries in deceased donor liver transplantation: The "one liver, one artery" approach.
- Author
-
Pravisani R, Sepulveda A, Cocchi L, de Mello E, Cauchy F, Dokmak S, Farges O, Durand F, Weiss E, Dondero F, and Lesurtel M
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Living Donors, Liver, Hepatic Artery surgery, Hepatic Artery transplantation, Liver Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
In liver transplantation (LT), graft aberrant hepatic arteries (aHAs) frequently require complex arterial reconstructions, potentially increasing the risk of post-operative complications. However, intrahepatic hilar arterial shunts are physiologically present and may allow selective aHA ligation. Thus, we performed a retrospective study from a single-center cohort of 618 deceased donor LTs where a selective reconstruction policy of aHAs was prospectively applied. In the presence of any aHA, the vessel with the largest caliber was first reconstructed. In case of adequate bilobar arterial perfusion assessed on intraparenchymal Doppler ultrasound, the remnant vessel was ligated; otherwise, it was reconstructed. Consequently, outcomes of three patient groups were compared: the "no aHAs" group (n = 499), the "reconstructed aHA" group (n = 25), and the "ligated aHA" group (n = 94). Primary endpoint was rate of biliary complications. Only 38.4% of right aHAs and 3.1% of left aHAs were reconstructed. Rates of biliary complications in the no aHA, reconstructed aHA, and ligated aHA groups were 23.4%, 28%, and 20.2% (p = 0.667), respectively. The prevalence rates of primary non-function (p = 0.534), early allograft dysfunction (p = 0.832), and arterial complications (p = 0.271), as well as patient survival (p = 0.266) were comparable among the three groups. Retransplantation rates were 3.8%, 4%, and 5.3% (p = 0.685), respectively. In conclusion, a selective reconstruction policy of aHAs based on Doppler assessment of bilobar intraparenchymal arterial flow did not increase post-operative morbidity and avoided unnecessary and complex arterial reconstructions., (© 2022 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. PO 2 21% oxygenated hypothermic machine perfusion in kidney transplantation: Any clinical benefit?
- Author
-
Pravisani R, Baccarani U, Molinari E, Cherchi V, Bacchetti S, Terrosu G, Avital I, Ekser B, and Adani GL
- Subjects
- Cold Ischemia, Graft Survival, Humans, Kidney, Organ Preservation, Perfusion adverse effects, Retrospective Studies, Tissue Donors, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: In deceased donor kidney transplantation (KT), the use of hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) has been acquiring the status of best practice in the pre-transplant management of kidney grafts. Two types of HMP are currently available, oxygenated HMP and non-oxygenated HMP. However, data on the real clinical impact of oxygenation on KT outcome are still heterogeneous., Methods: Retrospective study on a cohort of 103 patients transplanted with a single kidney graft that was managed either with end-ischemic oxygenated (O
2 group, Waves Machine, n = 51, 49.5%) or non-oxygenated HMP (no-O2 group, Life Port Kidney Transporter Machine, n = 52, 50.5%), during the period January 2016-December 2020. Oxygenation was performed at pO2 21%., Results: The median cold ischemia time was 29 h:40 min [IQR 26 h:55 min-31 h:10 min] and the prevalence of grafts from extended criteria donors (ECD) was 46.7%, with a median kidney donor profile index (KDPI) of 72 [41-94]. The study groups were homogeneous in terms of recipient characteristics, ischemia times and donor characteristics. O2 and no-O2 groups showed comparable outcomes in terms of delayed graft function (O2 vs no-O2 , 21.5% vs 25%, p = 0.58), vascular (0.2% vs 0.2%, p > 0.99) and urologic (13.7% vs 11.5%, p = 0.77) complications, and episodes of graft rejection (11.7% vs 7.7%, p = 0.52). At 1 year follow up, even creatinine serum levels were comparable between the groups (1.27 mg/dL [1.09 and 1.67] vs 1.4 mg/dL [1.9-1.78], p = 0.319), with similar post-transplant trend ( p = 0.870). No significant benefit was either observed in ECD or KDPI > 60 subgroups, respectively., Conclusions: Oxygenation at pO2 21% during HMP seems not to significantly enhance the KT outcomes in terms of postoperative complications or graft function.- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Re-thinking of T-tube use in whole liver transplantation: an analysis on the risk of delayed graft function.
- Author
-
Pravisani R, Isola M, Lorenzin D, Cherchi V, Boscolo E, Mocchegiani F, Terrosu G, and Baccarani U
- Subjects
- Delayed Graft Function, Graft Survival, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Tissue Donors, Liver Transplantation
- Abstract
The liver-gut axis has been identified as crucial mediator of liver regeneration. Thus, the use of a T-tube in liver transplantation (LT), which interrupts the enterohepatic bile circulation, may potentially have a detrimental effect on the early allograft functional recovery. We retrospectively analyzed a cohort of 261 patients transplanted with a whole liver graft, with a duct-to-duct biliary anastomosis, who did not develop any surgical complication within postoperative day 14. Early allograft dysfunction (EAD) was defined according to the criteria of Olthoff et al. (EAD-O), and graded according to the Model for Early Allograft Function (MEAF) score. EAD-O developed in 24.7% of recipients and the median MEAF score was 4.0 [interquartile range 2.9-5.5]. Both MEAF and EAD predicted 90-day post-LT mortality. A T-tube was used in 49.4% of cases (n = 129). After a propensity score matching for donor age, cold and warm ischemia time, donor risk index, balance of risk score, Child-Pugh class C, and MELD score, the T-tube group showed a significantly higher prevalence of EAD-O and value of MEAF than the no-T-tube group (EAD-O: 29 [34.1%] vs 16 [19.0%], p = 0.027; MEAF 4.5 [3.5-5.7] vs 3.7 [2.9-5.0], p = 0.014). In conclusion, T-tube use in LT may be a risk factor for EAD and higher MEAF, irrespective of graft quality and severity of pre-LT liver disease., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Current practice with grafts with multiple renal arteries in kidney transplantation: role of the methylene blue in the lower pole.
- Author
-
Cherchi V, Baccarani U, Ventin M, Pravisani R, Puggioni A, Zanini V, Lorenzin D, Vetrugno L, Risaliti A, Terrosu G, and Adani GL
- Subjects
- Humans, Kidney, Methylene Blue, Renal Artery surgery, Kidney Transplantation, Ureter
- Abstract
Kidneys with multiple renal arteries (MRAs) from different patches, may provide to the surgeon additional technical difficulties that make kidney transplants very challenging. MRAs have been largely debated over the years whether to be anastomosed or not due to the disappointing outcomes when it comes to inappropriate ligation or anastomosis. Some authors empirically reassure that smaller branches can be safely ligated and dissected without intraoperative and postoperative complications or compromising the functional recovery of the graft. Literature is poor about the possible differences in the management of superior and inferior polar arteries. Inferior polar arteries represent a topic of great interest as they may also supply the proximal ureter. The aim of this article is to merge the current knowledge about the management of inferior polar arteries and to highlight if there is any role of the methylene blue dye (MB) in the study of the ureteral vascularization in kidney transplantation. MB can be considered a safe and simple tool of vascular perfusion assessment in kidney transplantation. By injecting the dye-solution into the inferior MRA hidden ureteral branches can be unmasked and guide the surgeon to preserve important vessels. In view of their fundamental role in the vascularization of the ureter, the lower polar arteries of the graft, should be invariably studied by MB. It provides an objective, simple and fast tool for the evaluation of the ureteral vascularization when injected through the inferior MRA of the graft.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Assessment of hepatic steatosis based on needle biopsy images from deceased donor livers.
- Author
-
Cherchi V, Mea VD, Terrosu G, Brollo PP, Pravisani R, Calandra S, Scarpa E, Ventin M, D'Alì L, Lorenzin D, Loreto CD, Risaliti A, and Baccarani U
- Subjects
- Biopsy, Biopsy, Needle, Humans, Liver pathology, Living Donors, Fatty Liver diagnosis, Liver Transplantation methods
- Abstract
Background: Assessment of hepatic steatosis (HS) before transplantation requires the pathologist to read a graft biopsy. A simple method based on the evaluation of images from tissue samples with a smartphone could expedite and facilitate the liver selection. This study aims to assess the degree of HS by analysing photographic images from liver needle biopsy samples., Methods: Thirty-three biopsy-images were acquired with a smartphone. Image processing was carried out using ImageJ: background subtraction, conversion to HSB colour space, segmentation of the biopsy area, and evaluation of statistical features of Hue, Saturation, Brightness, Red, Green, and Blue channels on the biopsy area. After feature extraction, correlations were made with gold standard HS percentage assessed at two levels (frozen-section vs glass-slide). Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were calculated for each feature., Results: Correlations were found for H, S, R. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of the final classifier based on the K* algorithm were 94%, 92%, 94%., Limitations: Accuracy assessment was performed considering macrovesicular steatosis on specimens with mostly < 30% HS., Conclusions: The steatosis assessment based on needle biopsy images, proved to be an effective and promising method. Deep learning approaches could also be experimented with a larger set of images., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Reinfection of Transplanted Livers in HCV- and HCV/HIV-Infected Patients Is Characterized by a Different MicroRNA Expression Profile.
- Author
-
Dalla E, Bulfoni M, Cesselli D, Pravisani R, Hidaka M, Eguchi S, and Baccarani U
- Subjects
- Humans, Reinfection, HIV Infections metabolism, Hepatitis C complications, Liver Transplantation, MicroRNAs genetics, MicroRNAs metabolism
- Abstract
Background: After liver transplantation, HCV/HIV co-infected patients present, compared to the HCV mono-infected ones, increased HCV viral load, rapid progression to liver fibrosis and higher mortality. Liver biopsies (LB), obtained routinely 6 months after transplantation, represent a unique model to assess the early events related to graft re-infection. Here, we used miRNA sequencing of LB obtained from both HCV-and HCV/HIV-infected recipients, to identify transcriptional profiles able to explain the more severe outcome of these latter., Methods: miRNAs of 3 healthy livers, 3 HCV-LB and 3 HCV/HIV-LB were sequenced by Illumina HiSeq2500 platform. The DIANA-miRPath v3.0 webserver and DIANA-microT-CDS algorithm (v5.0) were used to characterize the functions of differentially expressed (DE-) miRNAs, querying the KEGG and Gene Ontology-Biological Process databases., Results: LB obtained from infected patients were characterized, with respect to controls, by a miRNA profile related to viral infection, immune system signaling and DNA damage in HCV-induced carcinogenesis. Instead, HCV-LB and HCV/HIV-LB differed in the expression of miRNAs involved in immunological and apoptotic processes and in extracellular matrix remodeling., Conclusions: liver reinfection processes are associated with early miRNA changes. Further studies are necessary to establish their prognostic role and possible actionability.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Association between indocyanine green clearance test and ischemic type biliary lesions within one year after orthotopic liver transplantation.
- Author
-
Cherchi V, Vetrugno L, Zanini V, Pravisani R, Ventin M, Lorenzin D, Adani GL, Clocchiatti L, Boscolo E, Vit A, Sponza M, D'Alì L, Di Loreto C, Bove T, Terrosu G, Risaliti A, and Baccarani U
- Subjects
- Constriction, Pathologic blood, Constriction, Pathologic diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents therapeutic use, Ischemia complications, Liver Transplantation adverse effects, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications blood, Reperfusion Injury blood, Spectrophotometry, Steroids therapeutic use, Time Factors, Biliary Tract blood supply, Coloring Agents pharmacokinetics, Indocyanine Green pharmacokinetics, Liver Transplantation methods, Postoperative Complications diagnostic imaging, Reperfusion Injury diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background: Ischemic type biliary lesions (ITBLs), a particular subset of non-anastomotic biliary strictures (NAS), are characterized by intra and extrahepatic strictures that occur in the absence of either hepatic artery thrombosis or stenosis. When they occur within the first year after liver transplantation their development is mostly related to ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI). The indocyanine green plasma disappearance rate (ICG-PDR) might be able to predict the probability of IRI-induced graft damage after liver transplantation., Objective: Our aim was to evaluate the association between ICG-PDR and the occurrence of ITBLs. Secondly, we searched for evidence of IRI in patients presenting ITBLs., Methods: This retrospective single-center observational study assessed a cohort of 60 liver transplant patients. Each patient underwent ICG-PDR on the 1st postoperative day. ITBLs were identified by means of either cholangiography or magnetic resonance imaging evidence of a deformity and narrowing of the biliary tree in the absence of hepatic artery thrombosis/stenosis., Results: ITBLs were discovered in 10 patients out of 60 liver recipients (16.67%) within one year after transplantation. A low ICG-PDR value was found to be a significant predictive factor for ITBL development, with an OR of 0.87 and a 95% CI of 0.77-0.97. Liver biopsies were performed in 56 patients presenting unexplained abnormal liver function test results. A statistically significant association was found between the development of ITBLs and anatomopathological evidence of IRI., Limitations: Retrospective, single-center study., Conclusions: The findings from this study show a relationship between low ICG-PDR values on first post-operative-day and the occurrence of ITBLs within 1 year after transplantation., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Immunonutrition in elective colorectal surgery and early inflammatory response.
- Author
-
Velkoski J, Grimaldi F, DI Meo L, Mion F, Pravisani R, Marino M, Calandra S, Cherchi V, and Terrosu G
- Subjects
- Elective Surgical Procedures, Humans, Preoperative Care, Retrospective Studies, Colorectal Surgery, Dietary Supplements, Digestive System Surgical Procedures, Immune System, Inflammation
- Abstract
Background: Immunonutrition has gained increasing interest over years, enough to be recommended in several international guidelines and to be included in the ERAS protocol for colorectal surgery. Although clinical advantages have been proved for malnourished cancer-affected patients, its role is more controversial in other settings. We evaluated the impact of immunonutrition in major colorectal elective surgery for benign and malignant diseases, regardless of the preoperative nutritional status., Methods: We conducted a single center retrospective analysis of a database of patients who underwent elective major colon-rectal surgery for benign and malignant diseases between January 2018 and February 2020. In January 2019 we started a protocol to define which patients should receive preoperative immunonutrition, regardless of their nutritional status. We compared early postoperative outcomes and laboratory data of this group (IMN) to those of patients who met all the characteristics to be included in the protocol, but who did not receive immunonutrition (CTRL)., Results: The IMN group showed significantly lower total leukocytes and neutrophils values and a lower pathological leukocytosis rate on 1
st postoperative day compared to the CTRL group (P=0.004). Although differences in early postoperative clinical outcomes were not significant, patients belonging to the IMN group needed less postoperative antibiotic treatment (P=0.047)., Conclusions: Immunonutrition could affect granulocytopoiesis and neutrophils recruitment in damaged tissues. This could lead to better and faster tissue healing and, consequently, to a reduction in postoperative complications even in normo-nourished patients. The lower need for antibiotic treatment could reflect a reduced susceptibility to postoperative infections.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Early Graft Dysfunction Following Kidney Transplantation: Can Thermographic Imaging Play a Predictive Role?
- Author
-
Cherchi V, Baccarani U, Vetrugno L, Pravisani R, Bove T, Meroi F, Terrosu G, and Adani GL
- Subjects
- Aged, Graft Survival, Humans, Kidney, Prospective Studies, Tissue Donors, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
The shortage of organs and the growing need for them over recent years have led to the adoption of less stringent donor acceptance criteria, resulting in the approval of marginal organs for transplant, especially from elderly donors. This implies a higher risk of graft dysfunction, a higher frequency of immunological and vascular complications, and shorter graft survival. Several strategies have been implemented in clinical practice to assess graft quality and suitability for transplantation. We have started to test the prospective intraoperative use of thermo-vision cameras during graft reperfusion. Images were acquired using the FLIR One Pro thermo-vision camera for android devices. We hypothesized that thermal images would give a better perspective about the quality of arterial perfusion and graft revascularization of the renal cortex. Thermo-vision cameras provide an easy-to-use, noninvasive, cost-effective tool for the global assessment of kidney graft cortical microcirculation in the immediate post-reperfusion period, providing additional data on the immediate viability and function of a graft.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Association between the donor to recipient ICG-PDR variation rate and the functional recovery of the graft after orthotopic liver transplantation: A case series.
- Author
-
Cherchi V, Vetrugno L, Terrosu G, Zanini V, Ventin M, Pravisani R, Tumminelli F, Brollo PP, Boscolo E, Peressutti R, Lorenzin D, Bove T, Risaliti A, and Baccarani U
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Graft Survival, Humans, Indocyanine Green metabolism, Liver pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Plasma drug effects, Postoperative Period, Primary Graft Dysfunction diagnosis, Primary Graft Dysfunction metabolism, Primary Graft Dysfunction pathology, Prognosis, Tissue Donors, Transplantation, Homologous methods, Coloring Agents chemistry, Indocyanine Green chemistry, Liver Diseases therapy, Liver Transplantation, Plasma chemistry
- Abstract
Background: Despite current advances in liver transplant surgery, post-operative early allograft dysfunction still complicates the patient prognosis and graft survival. The transition from the donor has not been yet fully understood, and no study quantifies if and how the liver function changes through its transfer to the recipient. The indocyanine green dye plasma disappearance rate (ICG-PDR) is a simple validated tool of liver function assessment. The variation rate between the donor and recipient ICG-PDR still needs to be investigated., Materials and Methods: Single-center retrospective study. ICG-PDR determinations were performed before graft retrieval (T1) and 24 hours after transplant (T2). The ICG-PDR relative variation rate between T1 and T2 was calculated to assess the graft function and suffering/recovering. Matched data were compared with the MEAF model of graft dysfunction., Objective: To investigate whether the variation rate between the donor ICG-PDR value and the recipient ICG-PDR measurement on first postoperative day (POD1) can be associated with the MEAF score., Results: 36 ICG-PDR measurements between 18 donors and 18 graft recipients were performed. The mean donor ICG-PDR was 22.64 (SD 6.35), and the mean receiver's ICG-PDR on 1st POD was 17.68 (SD 6.60), with a mean MEAF value of 4.51 (SD 1.23). Pearson's test stressed a good, linear inverse correlation between the ICG-PDR relative variation and the MEAF values, correlation coefficient -0.580 (p = 0.012)., Conclusion: The direct correlation between the donor to recipient ICG-PDR variation rate and MEAF was found. Measurements at T1 and T2 showed an up- or downtrend of the graft performance that reflect the MEAF values., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. miRNA expression profiles in liver grafts of HCV and HIV/HCV-infected recipients, 6 months after liver transplantation.
- Author
-
Bulfoni M, Pravisani R, Dalla E, Cesselli D, Hidaka M, Di Loreto C, Eguchi S, and Baccarani U
- Subjects
- Adult, Allografts metabolism, Allografts pathology, Allografts virology, Coinfection genetics, Coinfection pathology, Coinfection virology, Female, HIV physiology, HIV Infections genetics, HIV Infections pathology, HIV Infections virology, Hepacivirus physiology, Hepatitis C genetics, Hepatitis C pathology, Hepatitis C virology, Humans, Liver pathology, Liver virology, Liver Cirrhosis, Alcoholic genetics, Liver Cirrhosis, Alcoholic pathology, Liver Cirrhosis, Alcoholic therapy, Male, MicroRNAs genetics, Middle Aged, RNA, Viral genetics, RNA, Viral metabolism, Viral Load, Coinfection therapy, HIV Infections therapy, Hepatitis C therapy, Liver metabolism, Liver Transplantation, MicroRNAs metabolism
- Abstract
In hepatitis C virus (HCV)/human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infected patients, HIV enhances HCV replication and liver damage. Several microRNAs (miRNAs), active in pro-fibrotic and inflammatory pathways, have been implicated in the pathogenesis of this phenomenon. However, these miRNAs have been tested only in explanted cirrhotic livers, when the liver damage has become chronic and irreversible. No data are available on the early phase of viral infection, such as early after liver transplantation (LT). In the present study, the expression of miR-101, miR-122, miR-155, miR-192, miR-200c, miR-338, and miR-532 was determined by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction in liver biopsies of HCV (n = 19) and HCV/HIV-infected (n = 20) LT recipients, as well as in a control group (n = 18) of noninfected patients, transplanted for alcoholic cirrhosis. The timing of liver biopsy was 6 months post-LT. None of the patients was treated with direct-acting anti-HCV drugs. All co-infected recipients had suppressed HIV viral load. Grading and staging were assessed according to the Ishak Classification. HCV and HIV viral load were measured in the sera. miR-101 (p = .03), miR-122 (p = .012), and miR-192 (p = .038) were significantly downregulated in HCV/HIV co-infected and HCV mono-infected recipients when compared with noninfected recipients, and such downregulation was more pronounced in co-infected ones. Moreover, in co-infected recipients but not in mono-infected ones, miR-101 inversely correlated with the peripheral HCV-RNA levels (r = .41, p = .04) and miR-122 inversely correlated with peripheral HCV-RNA levels (r = .49, p = .03) and with the histological grading (r = .51, p = .02). In conclusion, as early as 6 months after LT, the presence of HIV-HCV co-infection enhanced a significant downregulation of certain miRNAs that showed a direct correlation with HCV viral load and liver inflammation., (© 2021 The Authors. Journal of Medical Virology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. An Italian survey on the use of T-tube in liver transplantation: old habits die hard!
- Author
-
Pravisani R, De Simone P, Patrono D, Lauterio A, Cescon M, Gringeri E, Colledan M, Di Benedetto F, di Francesco F, Antonelli B, Manzia TM, Carraro A, Vivarelli M, Regalia E, Vennarecci G, Guglielmo N, Cesaretti M, Avolio AW, Valentini MF, Lai Q, and Baccarani U
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Habits, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Living Donors, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Liver Transplantation
- Abstract
There is enough clinical evidence that a T-tube use in biliary reconstruction at adult liver transplantation (LT) does not significantly modify the risk of biliary stricture/leak, and it may even sustain infective and metabolic complications. Thus, the policy on T-tube use has been globally changing, with progressive application of more restrictive selection criteria. However, there are no currently standardized indications in such change, and many LT Centers rely only on own experience and routine. A nation-wide survey was conducted among all the 20 Italian adult LT Centers to investigate the current policy on T-tube use. It was found that 20% of Centers completely discontinued the T-tube use, while 25% Centers used it routinely in all LT cases. The remaining 55% of Centers applied a selective policy, based on criteria of technical complexity of biliary reconstruction (72.7%), followed by low-quality graft (63.6%) and high-risk recipient (36.4%). A T-tube use > 50% of annual caseload was not associated with high-volume Center status (> 70 LT per year), an active pediatric or living-donor transplant program, or use of DCD grafts. Only 10/20 (50%) Centers identified T-tube as a potential risk factor for complications other than biliary stricture/leak. In these cases, the suspected pathogenic mechanism comprised bacterial colonization (70%), malabsorption (70%), interruption of the entero-hepatic bile-acid cycle (50%), biliary inflammation due to an indwelling catheter (40%) and gut microbiota changes (40%). In conclusion, the prevalence of T-tube use among the Italian LT Centers is still relatively high, compared to the European trend (33%), and the potential detrimental effect of T-tube, beyond biliary stricture/leak, seems to be somehow underestimated., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Indocyanine green dye clearance test: early graft (dys)-function and long-term mortality after liver transplant. Should we continue to use it? An observational study.
- Author
-
Cherchi V, Vetrugno L, Zanini V, Isler T, Pravisani R, Borghi A, Baccarani U, Terrosu G, Risaliti A, and Bove T
- Subjects
- Humans, Postoperative Period, Prognosis, Sensitivity and Specificity, Indocyanine Green, Liver Transplantation
- Abstract
Early allograft dysfunction (EAD) can be a serious complication in the immediate postoperative period following liver transplantation. Our aim was to study the prognostic role of the indocyanine green plasma disappearance rate (ICG-PDR) in predicting early and late EAD and mortality at 3 and 12 months and 5 years after liver transplantation. ICG-PDR values were also assessed for association with the Donor Risk Index (DRI). 220 patients underwent orthotopic liver transplantation. In 77 patients, ICG-PDR was assessed on the 1st post-operative (PO) day. ICG, a water-soluble dye almost entirely excreted into the bile, was measured by spectrophotometry to evaluate graft (dys)-function. DRI was calculated in all patients. The primary study outcomes were the presence (or absence) of EAD after transplant and the results of mortality risk factor analysis. EAD occurred in 18 patients. 1st PO day ICG-PDR was significantly associated with EAD (p < 0.005). A threshold ICG-PDR value < 16%/min on the 1st PO day was also associated with patient probability to survive at 3 and 12 months and 5 years. The sensitivity and specificity of the AUC was good in predicting EAD, being 83% and 56%, respectively, for a 1st PO day ICG-PDR cut-off value < 16%/min. In this study, ICG-PDR on the 1st PO day following OLT can reliably predict EAD and survival at 3 and 12 months and 5 years. ICG-PDR should, therefore, be routinely performed on the 1st PO day following OLTx in all patients in light of its important prognostic role.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Hypothermic machine perfusion can safely prolong cold ischemia time in deceased donor kidney transplantation. A retrospective analysis on postoperative morbidity and graft function.
- Author
-
Adani GL, Pravisani R, Tulissi P, Isola M, Calini G, Terrosu G, Boscutti G, Avital I, Ekser B, and Baccarani U
- Subjects
- Aged, Allografts blood supply, Cold Ischemia adverse effects, Delayed Graft Function epidemiology, Delayed Graft Function prevention & control, Female, Graft Rejection epidemiology, Graft Rejection prevention & control, Graft Survival, Humans, Kidney blood supply, Kidney Transplantation methods, Male, Middle Aged, Organ Preservation instrumentation, Perfusion instrumentation, Postoperative Complications etiology, Postoperative Complications prevention & control, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Cold Ischemia methods, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Organ Preservation methods, Perfusion methods, Postoperative Complications epidemiology
- Abstract
In deceased donor kidney transplantation (KT), a prolonged cold ischemia time (CIT) is a negative prognostic factor for KT outcome, and the efficacy of hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) in prolonging CIT without any additional hazard is highly debated. We conducted a retrospective study on a cohort of 154 single graft deceased donor KTs, in which a delayed HMP, after a preliminary period of static cold storage (SCS), was used to prolong CIT for logistic reasons. Primary outcomes were postoperative complications as well as 1 year graft survival and function. 73 cases (47.4%) were managed with HMP and planned KT, while 81 (52.6%) with SCS and urgent KT. The median CIT in HMP group and SCS group was 29 hour:57 minutes [27-31 hour:45 minutes] and 11 hour:25 minutes [9-14 hour:30 minutes], respectively (P < .001). The period of SCS in the HMP group was significantly shorter than in the SCS group (10 vs. 11 hour:25 minutes, P = .02) as well as the prevalence of expanded criteria donors was significantly higher (43.8% vs. 18.5%, P < .01). After propensity score matching for these two baseline characteristics, the HMP and SCS groups showed comparable outcomes in terms of delayed graft function, vascular, and urologic complications, infections, and episodes of graft rejection. At 1 year follow-up, serum creatinine levels were comparable between the groups. Therefore, the use of HMP to prolong the CIT and convert KT into a planned procedure seemed to have an adequate safety profile, with outcomes comparable to KT managed as an urgent procedure and a CIT nearly three time shorter., (© 2020 International Center for Artificial Organs and Transplantation and Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Impact of kidney transplant morbidity on elderly recipients' outcomes.
- Author
-
Pravisani R, Isola M, Baccarani U, Crestale S, Tulissi P, Vallone C, Risaliti A, Cilloni D, and Adani GL
- Subjects
- Aged, Graft Rejection, Graft Survival, Humans, Morbidity, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Kidney Failure, Chronic, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Nowadays, advanced age does not represent an absolute contraindication to kidney transplantation (KT). However, aging is frequently associated with multiple comorbidities and lower performance status, making KT candidates less surgically fit. Limited data are available on the impact of KT morbidity on elderly recipients' outcomes., Methods: Retrospective study on a single center cohort of 130 KT recipients over 65 years old, representing 16.2% of KT clinical series, during the period 2000-2018. Number and severity of comorbidities were evaluated with the Charlson Comorbidity index (CCI)., Results: The median age at transplantation was 67 [IQR66-71] years and median CCI was 5 [IQR4-6]. The prevalence of postoperative complications with a Clavien-Dindo (C-D) severity score > 2 was 29%. Increasing age did not predict KT morbidity in terms of C-D score > 2, infectious, respiratory, cardiologic, urologic or vascular complications, delayed graft function, symptomatic lymphocele, bleeding, acute or chronic rejection. Conversely, CCI score was a predictor of overall complications with C-D score > 2, cardiologic, respiratory and vascular complications, and bleeding. Among others, CCI score, post-KT cardiologic complications, C-D score > 2 were identified as significant predictors of both early mortality and graft loss in univariate analysis. Increasing recipient age did not correlate with graft loss risk and graft loss did not impact patient survival. C-D score > 2 was a predictor of poor survival even in multivariate analysis., Conclusions: Elderly recipients showed a significant vulnerability to KT morbidity which correlates with CCI. While graft loss did not impact recipient survival, severe postoperative complications (C-D > 2) were independently associated increased mortality.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.