Back to Search Start Over

Laparoscopic living donor hepatectomy for liver transplantation in children

Authors :
Olivier Vignaux
Didier Houssin
Christophe Chardot
Mourad Ghimouz
Sophie Branchereau
Eric Barshasz
Frédéric Gauthier
Daniel Cherqui
Pierre Louis Fagniez
Olivier Soubrane
Emmanuel Husson
Source :
The Lancet. 359:392-396
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2002.

Abstract

Summary Background Because cadaveric organ donors are in short supply, living donors are increasingly being used in transplantations. We have developed a safe and reproducible method for laparoscopic liver resection. Methods Left hepatic lobectomy (resection of segments 2and 3) was done by laparoscopy in one woman aged 27years and one man aged 31 years. The grafts were prepared under laparoscopy, without any vascular clamping, and were externalised through a suprapubic Pfannenstiel incision. Both grafts were transplanted conventionally to the patients' respective sons, who were both aged 1 year and had biliary atresia. Findings Donor operations lasted 7 h for the woman and 6 h for the man, and warm ischaemia times were 4 and 10 min, respectively. Blood loss was 150 and 450 mL, respectively, and no transfusions were required. Neither patient had complications during or after sugery; and hospital stay was 7 and 5 days, respectively. Both recipients are alive and have excellent graft function. Interpretation We have shown the feasibility of laparoscopic living donor hepatectomy from parent to child. If the safety and feasbility of this procedure can be shown in larger series, laparoscopic donor left lobectomy could become a new option for paediatric living donor liver transplantation.

Details

ISSN :
01406736
Volume :
359
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....93430e4c8f392d9561e3f8d98831b0ff
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(02)07598-0