Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci 2024; 28 (11): 3752-3760
DOI: 10.26355/eurrev_202406_36380

Living donor liver transplantation for patients with portal vein thrombosis: high-volume single center experience

A. Elsarawy, S. Akbulut, S. Aktas, H. Kilercik, U. Alkara, S. Sevmis

Department of Surgery and Organ Transplantation, Faculty of Medicine, Gaziosmanpasa Hospital, Istanbul Yeni Yuzyil University Istanbul, Turkey. akbulutsami@gmail.com


OBJECTIVE: End-stage liver disease is commonly associated with portal vein thrombosis (PVT). Lastly, PVT is no longer an absolute contraindication for liver transplantation, and many centers adopt portal vein thrombectomy. PVT imposes special technical difficulties during living donor liver transplantation (LDLT). In this research, the experience with PVT cases during LDLT in a high-volume center is introduced.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Between January 2018 and July 2023, 312 patients underwent LDLT. After 88 cases were excluded, 224 cases were included, and their incidence of pre-transplant PVT was 16.5% (37/224). Demographic and clinical features, perioperative variables, and post-transplant outcomes of patients with PVT (PVT group, n=37) were compared to patients who had no PVT (non-PVT group, n=187).

RESULTS: According to Yerdel classification, 16, 16, 2, and 3 patients had PVT grade I, II, III, and IV, respectively. Complete venous thrombectomy was accomplished in 34 patients, while for three patients, thrombectomy was not feasible, and graft inflow was established by interposition vascular graft. For portal flow modulation, splenectomy and splenic artery ligation were performed in 7 and 4 patients, respectively, while two patients underwent post-transplant splenic artery embolization. The PVT group had longer operation time (p<0.001), longer warm ischemia time (p=0.031), longer anhepatic phase (p<0.001), and intraoperatively required more than 3 packed RBCs units (p=0.029) and ≥1 platelet unit transfusion (p=0.021) than the non-PVT group. No statistically significant difference was found between groups in terms of re-exploration (p=0.954), post-transplant PVT (p=0.375), biliary (p=0.253) and arterial complications (p=0.593), ICU stay (p=0.633), hospital stay (p=896), and 30-day mortality (p=1.000). Survival analysis showed no statistically significant difference regarding 1-year survival (p=0.176) between both groups.

CONCLUSIONS: This study showed that patients with different stages of PVT can successfully undergo LDLT in experienced centers and that they do not differ from patients without PVT in terms of post-transplant complications.

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A. Elsarawy, S. Akbulut, S. Aktas, H. Kilercik, U. Alkara, S. Sevmis
Living donor liver transplantation for patients with portal vein thrombosis: high-volume single center experience

Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci
Year: 2024
Vol. 28 - N. 11
Pages: 3752-3760
DOI: 10.26355/eurrev_202406_36380