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Temporal trends of waitlistings for liver transplantation in Italy: The ECALITA (Evolution of IndiCAtion in LIver transplantation in ITAly) registry study

Authors :
Tommaso Maria Manzia
Silvia Trapani
Alessandra Nardi
Andrea Ricci
Ilaria Lenci
Martina Milana
Roberta Angelico
Tullia Maria De Feo
Salvatore Agnes
Enzo Andorno
Umberto Baccarani
Amedeo Carraro
Matteo Cescon
Umberto Cillo
Michele Colledan
Luciano De Carlis
Paolo De Simone
Fabrizio Di Benedetto
Giuseppe Maria Ettorre
Salvatore Gruttadauria
Luigi Giovanni Lupo
Vincenzo Mazzaferro
Renato Romagnoli
Giorgio Rossi
Massimo Rossi
Marco Spada
Giovanni Vennarecci
Marco Vivarelli
Fausto Zamboni
Giuseppe Tisone
Massimo Cardillo
Mario Angelico
Manzia, T
Trapani, S
Nardi, A
Ricci, A
Lenci, I
Milana, M
Angelico, R
De Feo, T
Agnes, S
Andorno, E
Baccarani, U
Carraro, A
Cescon, M
Cillo, U
Colledan, M
De Carlis, L
De Simone, P
Di Benedetto, F
Ettorre, G
Gruttadauria, S
Lupo, L
Mazzaferro, V
Romagnoli, R
Rossi, G
Rossi, M
Spada, M
Vennarecci, G
Vivarelli, M
Zamboni, F
Tisone, G
Cardillo, M
Angelico, M
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier Inc., 2022.

Abstract

Background: Over the last decades relevant epidemiological changes of liver diseases have occurred, together with greatly improved treatment opportunities. Aim: To investigate how the indications for elective adult liver transplantation and the underlying disease etiologies have evolved in Italy. Methods: We recruited from the National Transplant Registry a cohort comprising 17,317 adults patients waitlisted for primary liver transplantation from January-2004 to December-2020. Patients were divided into three Eras:1(2004–2011),2(2012–2014) and 3(2015–2020). Results: Waitlistings for cirrhosis decreased from 65.9% in Era 1 to 46.1% in Era 3, while those for HCC increased from 28.7% to 48.7%. Comparing Eras 1 and 3, waitlistings for HCV-related cirrhosis decreased from 35.9% to 12.1%, yet those for HCV-related HCC increased from 8.5% to 26.7%. Waitlistings for HBV-related cirrhosis remained almost unchanged (13.2% and 12.4%), while those for HBV-related HCC increased from 4.0% to 11.6%. ALD-related cirrhosis decreased from 16.9% to 12.9% while ALD-related HCC increased from 1.9% to 3.9%. Conclusions: A sharp increase in liver transplant waitlisting for HCC and a concomitant decrease of waitlisting for cirrhosis have occurred In Italy. Despite HCV infection has noticeably decreased, still remains the primary etiology of waitlisting for HCC, while ALD and HBV represent the main causes for cirrhosis.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....517c7f1e4ae43e43bd5f70f88b29a2e2