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Increasing Living Donor Liver Transplantation Using Liver Paired Exchange

Authors :
Vikraman Gunabushanam
Swaytha Ganesh
Kyle Soltys
George Mazariegos
Armando Ganoza
Michele Molinari
Amit Tevar
Christopher Hughes
Abhinav Humar
Source :
Journal of the American College of Surgeons. 234(2)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) continues to be the primary modality of liver transplantation in Asia, but it accounts for about 5% of all liver transplantations in the US. ABO incompatibility is the primary reason motivated donors are declined. Although kidney paired exchanges are common, liver paired exchange (LPE) is still evolving in the US.This is a retrospective review (between January 1, 2019, and July 31, 2021) of our initial experience with LPE.A total of 10 LPEs (20 LDLTs) were performed during the study period. Seven LPEs were initiated by a nondirected O donor. The other 3 pair sets involved 1 ABO compatible and 1 ABO incompatible pair. Transplantations in a pair set were completed within a mean of 4.8 (range 1-14) days of each other. All 20 donors are doing well with no major complications at 12.7 (range 1-20) months. Seventeen of 20 recipients are alive and have good allograft function. One recipient died in the early postoperative period. Two late deaths of patients with functioning allografts were due to COVID-19 (at 8 months) and peritoneal carcinomatosis and gram-negative sepsis (at 9 months).LPE is feasible in a high-volume LDLT center and is a useful option to increase LDLT by overcoming ABO incompatibility. Nondirected donors can be utilized to initiate an LPE.

Details

ISSN :
18791190
Volume :
234
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Surgeons
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f99007d88cdad8151136a93be0f03dea