학술논문

Comparison of Biliary Complications Rates After Brain Death, Donation After Circulatory Death, and Living-Donor Liver Transplantation: A Single-Center Cohort Study
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Digestive Diseases
Transplantation
Organ Transplantation
Liver Disease
Adult
Humans
Liver Transplantation
Cohort Studies
Brain Death
Living Donors
Retrospective Studies
Graft Survival
Tissue Donors
Death
Tissue and Organ Procurement
liver transplantation
living donors
donation after brain death
donation after circulatory death
biliary anastomotic stricture
ischemic cholangiopathy
bile leak
Surgery
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Donation-after-circulatory-death (DCD), donation-after-brain-death (DBD), and living-donation (LD) are the three possible options for liver transplantation (LT), each with unique benefits and complication rates. We aimed to compare DCD-, DBD-, and LD-LT-specific graft survival and biliary complications (BC). We collected data on 138 DCD-, 3,027 DBD- and 318 LD-LTs adult recipients from a single center and analyzed patient/graft survival. BC (leak and anastomotic/non-anastomotic stricture (AS/NAS)) were analyzed in a subset of 414 patients. One-/five-year graft survival were 88.6%/70.0% for DCD-LT, 92.6%/79.9% for DBD-LT, and, 91.7%/82.9% for LD-LT. DCD-LTs had a 1.7-/1.3-fold adjusted risk of losing their graft compared to DBD-LT and LD-LT, respectively (p < 0.010/0.403). Bile leaks were present in 10.1% (DCD-LTs), 7.2% (DBD-LTs), and 36.2% (LD-LTs) (ORs, DBD/LD vs. DCD: 0.7/4.2, p = 0.402/