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The changing clinical presentation of recurrent primary biliary cirrhosis after liver transplantation
- Source :
- Transplantation. 76:1583-1588
- Publication Year :
- 2003
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2003.
-
Abstract
- Background. Recurrent disease after liver transplant is a significant problem. Recurrent primary biliary cirrhosis (RPBC) is a histologic diagnosis. Clinical data is unreliable in predicting or diagnosing recurrence. RPBC appears to have a changing clinical presentation in recent years. Materials and Methods. The diagnosis of RPBC after liver transplantation was made histologically. Data were obtained from our prospectively maintained liver-transplant database and evaluated statistically. Results. Between 1985 and 1999, 1,835 liver transplants were performed, 169 for PBC. One hundred fifty-six patients were evaluated (one patient received retransplantation, and 13 were excluded). Seventeen (10.9%) experienced recurrence. Median posttransplantation follow-up time was 72.1 months. Median time to recurrence was 49.6 months. Median follow-up time after recurrence was 11.5 months. Neither acute rejection episodes (P=0.34) nor OKT3 use (P=0.36) before diagnosis of recurrence was significant. The combination of cyclosporine, azathioprine, and prednisolone demonstrated recurrence in 6 of 71 (8.4%). Six of 49 (12.2%) patients treated with cyclosporine with or without mycophenolate mofetil and prednisolone experienced recurrence. Six of 36 (16.7%) patients treated with tacrolimus and prednisolone with or without mycophenolate mofetil experienced recurrence. Patients treated with cyclosporine had numerically fewer recurrences than those treated with tacrolimus (P=0.11). Conclusions. Patients with RPBC demonstrated prolonged survival. Clinical factors did not aid in predicting RPBC. The clinical course of RPBC appears to be different than in the earlier years of liver transplantation. Immunosuppression may play a role. The use and type of antimetabolite drugs had no affect on recurrence. RPBC demonstrated a different clinical course with tacrolimus treatment (shorter time to recurrence) and increased incidence when compared with cyclosporine treatment. Controlled randomized studies are necessary to determine differences between tacrolimus and cyclosporine treatment, if any.
- Subjects :
- Graft Rejection
Reoperation
medicine.medical_specialty
Time Factors
medicine.drug_class
medicine.medical_treatment
Azathioprine
Liver transplantation
Antimetabolite
Gastroenterology
Major Histocompatibility Complex
Primary biliary cirrhosis
HLA Antigens
Isoantibodies
Predictive Value of Tests
Recurrence
Internal medicine
Humans
Medicine
Retrospective Studies
Transplantation
Liver Cirrhosis, Biliary
business.industry
Histocompatibility Testing
Patient Selection
Incidence (epidemiology)
Immunosuppression
medicine.disease
Survival Analysis
Tacrolimus
Liver Transplantation
Surgery
Prednisolone
Drug Therapy, Combination
business
Immunosuppressive Agents
Follow-Up Studies
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00411337
- Volume :
- 76
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Transplantation
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9c5fce5d8cef67b3a114566154405e89