Does tacrolimus offer virtual freedom from chronic rejection after primary liver transplantation? Risk and prognostic factors in 1,048 liver transplantations with a mean follow-up of 6 years
Open Access
- 1 July 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Liver Transplantation
- Vol. 7 (7) , 623-630
- https://doi.org/10.1053/jlts.2001.25364
Abstract
Tacrolimus has proven to be a potent immunosuppressive agent in liver transplantation (LT). Its introduction has led to significantly less frequent and severe acute rejection. Little is known about the rate of chronic rejection (CR) in primary LT using tacrolimus therapy. The aim of the present study is to examine the long-term incidence of CR, risk factors, prognostic factors, and outcome after CR. The present study evaluated the development of CR in 1,048 consecutive adult primary liver allograft recipients initiated and mostly maintained on tacrolimus-based immunosuppressive therapy. They were evaluated with a mean follow-up of 77.3 ± 14.7 months (range, 50.7 to 100.1 months). To assess the impact of primary diagnosis on the rate and outcome of CR, the population was divided into 3 groups. Group I included patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV)- or hepatitis B virus (HBV)-induced cirrhosis (n = 312); group II included patients diagnosed with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), or autoimmune hepatitis (AIH; n = 217); and group III included patients with all other diagnoses (n = 519). Overall, 32 of 1,048 patients (3.1%) developed CR. This represented 13 (4.1%), 12 (5.5%), and 7 patients (1.3%) in groups I, II, and III, respectively. The relative risk for developing CR was 3.2 times greater for group I and 4.3 times greater for group II compared with group III. This difference was statistically significant (P = .004). The incidence of acute rejection and total number of acute rejection episodes were significantly greater in patients who developed CR compared with those who did not (P < .0001). Similarly, the mean donor age for CR was significantly older than for patients without CR (43.0 v 36.2 years; P = .02). Thirteen of the 32 patients (40.6%) who developed CR retained their original grafts for a mean period of 54 ± 25 months after diagnosis. Seven patients (21.9%) underwent re-LT, and 12 patients (38.3%) died. Serum bilirubin levels and the presence of arteriopathy, arterial loss, and duct loss on liver biopsy at the time of diagnosis of CR were significantly greater among the 3 groups of patients. In addition, patient and graft survival for group I were significantly worse compared with groups II and III. We conclude that CR occurred rarely among patients maintained long term on tacrolimus-based immunosuppressive therapy. When steroid use is controlled, the incidence of acute rejection, mean donor age, HBV- and/or HCV-induced cirrhosis, or a diagnosis of PBC, PSC, or AIH were found to be predictors of CR. Greater values for serum bilirubin level, duct loss, arteriopathy, arteriolar loss, and presence of HCV or HBV were found to be poor prognostic factors for the 3 groups; greater total serum bilirubin value (P = .05) was the only factor found to be significant between patients who had graft loss versus those who recovered.Keywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Long-Term Survival After Liver Transplantation in 4,000 Consecutive Patients at a Single CenterAnnals of Surgery, 2000
- INCREASED INCIDENCE OF CHRONIC REJECTION IN ADULT PATIENTS TRANSPLANTED FOR AUTOIMMUNE HEPATITIS: ASSESSMENT OF RISK FACTORS1Transplantation, 2000
- COMPARATIVE LONG-TERM EVALUATION OF TACROLIMUS AND CYCLOSPORINE IN PEDIATRIC LIVER TRANSPLANTATIONTransplantation, 2000
- CHRONIC LIVER ALLOGRAFT REJECTION IN A POPULATION TREATED PRIMARILY WITH TACROLIMUS AS BASELINE IMMUNOSUPPRESSIONTransplantation, 2000
- Update of the International Banff Schema for liver allograft rejection: Working recommendations for the histopathologic staging and reporting of chronic rejectionHepatology, 2000
- Evolving concepts in the diagnosis, pathogenesis, and treatment of chronic hepatic allograft rejectionLiver Transplantation and Surgery, 1999
- RECURRENCE OF AUTOIMMUNE HEPATITIS AFTER LIVER TRANSPLANTATION1,2Transplantation, 1999
- Long-term immunoprophylaxis of hepatitis B virus reinfection in recipients of human liver allografts.1987
- EVIDENCE FOR AN IMMUNE RESPONSE TO HLA CLASS I ANTIGENS IN THE VANISHING-BILEDUCT SYNDROME AFTER LIVER TRANSPLANTATIONThe Lancet, 1987
- Liver Transplantation with Use of Cyclosporin a and PrednisoneNew England Journal of Medicine, 1981