Liver Transplantation, Including the Concept of Reduced-size Liver Transplants in Children
- 1 October 1988
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 208 (4) , 410-420
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-198810000-00003
Abstract
Since the establishment of a clinical program in liver transplantation in 1984, 162 liver transplants have been performed in 131 patients (78 adults, 53 children). The patient mortality rate while waiting for a suitable organ has been 8% for adults and only 4% for children (25-46% reported in the literature). The low pediatric mortality is a result of the use of reduced-size liver transplants. A total of 14 procedures have been performed in recipients whose clinical condition was deteriorating and for whom no full-size graft could be located. Of 14 children, 13 were less than 3 years of age. Patient survival is 50%, comparable to survival of high-risk recipients of full-size livers. Using reduced-size liver grafting in a transplant program can lower mortality for children awaiting a transplant by overcoming size disparity. Reduced-size liver grafting will allow more effective use of donor resources and provide a potential avenue of research for organ splitting and living related donation.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reduced-sized orthotopic liver graft in hepatic transplantation in children.1984
- A FLEXIBLE PROCEDURE FOR MULTIPLE CADAVERIC ORGAN PROCUREMENT1984
- Liver Transplantation in ChildrenEuropean Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 1983
- Evolution of Liver TransplantationHepatology, 1982
- Surgical anatomy and anatomical surgery of the liverWorld Journal of Surgery, 1982
- Fulminant hepatic failure in childhood: An analysis of 31 casesArchives of Disease in Childhood, 1980
- The case for and technique of heterotopic liver grafting.1979
- Hepatic trisegmentectomy and other liver resections.1975
- Partial Hepatic Autotransplantation With Complete Revascularization in the DogArchives of Surgery, 1967
- HOMOTRANSPLANTATION OF THE LIVER IN HUMANS.1963