학술논문

Results of pediatric living donor compared to deceased donor liver transplantation in the PELD/MELD era: Experience from two centers on two different continents.
Document Type
Article
Source
Pediatric Transplantation. Feb2016, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p72-82. 11p.
Subject
*LIVER transplantation
*TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc. in children
*ORGAN donation
*ORGAN donors
*NON-heart-beating organ donation
Language
ISSN
1397-3142
Abstract
The LDLT option in the pediatric population allows recipients to be transplanted early. A total of 202 consecutive pediatric liver transplants from two different institutions-108 ( LDLT) and 94 ( DDLT)-were retrospectively compared. Overall, one- and three-yr patient and graft survival were similar between DDLT and LDLT. ACR was greater in recipients of DDLT at one and three yr (50.8% and 61.0%) compared to LDLT (30.8% and 32.2%) (p = 0.002). When the data were stratified according to PELD/ MELD score, LDLT with a low score had better one- and three-yr graft survival (96.2% and 96.2%) compared to DDLT (88.2% and 85.2%) (p = 0.02), with comparable patient survival (p = 0.75). Patient and graft survival were similar between DDLT and LDLT in the high PELD/ MELD group. Lower incidence of ACR in both low and high PELD/ MELD groups was (29.6% and 34.3%) for LDLT compared to DDLT (50.3% and 53.3%, p = 0.002 and p = 0.028, respectively). Regardless of PELD/ MELD score, status, age group, and recipient weight, LDLT provides excellent patient and graft survival with a lower incidence of rejection compared to DDLT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]