Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Medscape coverage of: 56th Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases | Complications of Cirrhosis Controversies in Liver Transplantation Tram T. Tran, MD Introduction Current controversies in liver transplantation continue to revolve around the disparity between available deceased donor organs and maximizing the available donor pool, difficult clinical scenarios of patient selection given limited donor resources, management strategies for hepatocellular carcinoma, and the treatment of long-term complications, including disease recurrence and other comorbidities. Many of these topics as well as results of ongoing research were the focus of key presentations during this year's meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. Expanding the Donor Pool Strategies aimed at expansion of the available number of liver grafts include the use of living donors for both pediatric and adult recipients, the splitting of 1 cadaveric organ for 2 recipients, and the use of " extended criteria " donors. These " extended criteria " grafts are those with risk factors for early or delayed graft dysfunction after transplantation and may include factors such as advanced-age donor, hemodynamic instability of donor requiring pressors, steatosis, viral hepatitis positivity, and the use of non-heart-beating donor (NHBD) grafts. Barshes and colleagues[1] examined the outcome of 120 NHBD transplants performed at their center since the implementation of MELD (Model for End-Stage Liver Disease) scoring as compared with those of recipients of heart-beating donor (HBD) grafts; subjects were matched for pretransplant criteria. Results showed 1-year patient survival rates of 80.9% vs 88.3% (P = ns) for the NHBD and HBD groups, respectively. Graft survival was lower in the NHBD group (65.3% vs 84.3; P = .02), with 8 retransplants required compared with 2 retransplants in the HBD cohort. Therefore, although there appeared to be some increased risk for graft loss among recipients of grafts from NHBDs requiring retransplantation, overall patient survival was acceptable. Hepatocellular Carcinoma -- Where Are We? Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an established indication for liver transplantation, with excellent patient and graft survival and low rates of recurrence when specific selection criteria are met. The Mazzaferro criteria[2] are the most widely used guidelines for transplantation for HCC (1 lesion, no greater than 5 cm, or up to 3 lesions, none greater than 3 cm), with excellent recurrence-free survival. However, recent data reported by Yao and colleagues[3] suggest that modest expansion of the current University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) criteria may still yield low HCC recurrence, while allowing more patients to be transplanted for HCC. The UCSF criteria propose the following guidelines for transplantation: a single lesion not exceeding 6.5 cm; or 2-3 lesions, none exceeding 4.5 cm, with total tumor diameter not greater than 8 cm. Yao and colleagues[4] presented the long-term follow-up of 23 patients meeting the UCSF criteria transplanted over a 4-year period and reported 1- and 4-year recurrence-free rates of 90% -- a finding not statistically different from rates reported for patients transplanted at earlier stages of tumor. Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) is a viable option for patients experiencing long waiting times for deceased donor liver transplants (DDLT), and has allowed for expansion of the available donor pool. Patients meeting criteria for transplantation for HCC are also candidates for LDLT, and the concern for disease progression in HCC often leads to rapid listing on the wait list and " fast-track " transplantation. Kulik and colleagues[5] evaluated the outcomes in 56 LDLT recipients transplanted for HCC vs 31 DDLT recipients and found that waiting time was significantly shorter for LDLT (162 vs 471 days, P < .0001). They also found that although tumor stage was the same for both cohorts, 3-year recurrence-free survival was 46% in the LDLT group compared with 79% in the DDLT group (P = .08), and a higher proportion of patients (42% vs 0%; P = .003) in the LDLT group had disease recurrence at 3 years. These findings suggest that " fast-tracking " patients with cancer to transplant may include more patients with aggressive tumor biology who would have otherwise been observed during a longer waiting period for transplant. Cirrhosis is a risk factor for the development of HCC. The only treatment options for HCC with acceptable recurrence-free survival include hepatic resection or liver transplantation. Given the long waiting times for liver transplantation, curative resection should be considered in selected patients. Some studies have suggested that the treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection post resection may reduce the risk for late HCC recurrence.[6] Chen and colleagues[7] reported results of a randomized multicenter study evaluating the efficacy of interferon* therapy in 264 patients with hepatitis B and C after resection for HCC, with a median follow-up of 42 months. Although interferon therapy was well tolerated, no difference in overall survival or recurrence-free survival was noted after 53 weeks of treatment. Retransplantation In the setting of lack of donor organ availability, increasing death rates on the waiting list for primary orthotopic liver transplantation, and the difficulties with recurrent disease, significant debate continues surrounding the issue of retransplantation. There is higher associated morbidity and mortality with retransplantation; however, at present, 4% of patients listed for liver transplantation are retransplant candidates with no other option. Pedersen and colleagues[8] assessed the applicability of the MELD score to assess wait-list mortality in retransplant candidates compared with primary transplant candidates. They extracted data from the UNOS (United Network for Organ Sharing) database and found that patients relisted had higher MELD scores (22 vs 14), but when adjusted for equivalent MELD scores, short-term wait-list mortality was slightly lower in the retransplant candidates than in the primary candidates. The study authors concluded that MELD score is an important determinant of wait-list mortality, and that patients listed for retransplant have equivalent wait-list mortality. The continuing controversy will concern not only predicting how soon a patient needs retransplantation based on the MELD score but also determining whom we should be transplanting. Hepatitis C is the leading indication for orthotopic liver transplantation worldwide, and with nearly universal reinfection of the graft, recurrent HCV disease is problematic clinically. HCV-related graft cirrhosis has been reported as high as 30% at 5 years.[9] At present, 40% of liver retransplants in the United States are due to recurrent HCV disease. Soule and colleagues[10] assessed outcomes in patients undergoing retransplantation for HCV-related disease compared with patients receiving a primary liver transplant. They found a significantly worse survival outcome at 5 years (60% vs 28%; P < .03) for patients undergoing retransplantation, with the leading cause of death after retransplant being recurrent HCV disease leading to liver failure. This study, along with many other reports, suggests that more strict selection criteria may be required when considering retransplantation in patients with aggressive HCV recurrence, although considerable controversy still exists in this arena. Comorbidities -- Adding to the Problem In a late-breaking abstract presented during these meeting proceedings, Foxton and colleagues[11] reported on 163 patients who underwent liver transplantation for HCV infection at their center between 1990 and 2004. Biopsies were performed in all subjects, and 33% of recipients were found to have advanced fibrosis within 6 years after transplantation. Factors strongly associated with progression to fibrosis included donor age greater than 55 years (P = .003), pretransplant diabetes (P = .03), and posttransplant diabetes (P = .00015). The combination of older donor age and diabetes status resulted in an 8-fold risk of fibrosis progression. This study yielded useful information regarding potential selection criteria for donors in HCV-infected individuals who appear at highest risk for severe recurrence, such as retransplant candidates. Renal dysfunction is associated with end-stage liver disease due to multifactorial etiologies, including liver-induced renal ischemia, and comorbidities such as hepatitis B and C. Hepatorenal syndrome, especially in the acute setting and requiring dialysis, is a poor prognostic indicator, with only 35% of patients surviving to liver transplant or discharge.[12] Dellon and colleagues[13] examined the impact of dialysis and older age on survival after liver transplantation and reported that in the MELD era, more recipients are on dialysis and require dual-organ transplantation (liver, kidney). More important, they found that among patients who were older than 65 years of age and on dialysis at the time of transplant, 1-year survival in the MELD era was worse for those receiving only a liver transplant (50%) than for those receiving liver and kidney transplants (67%). Across all groups, pre- and post MELD era, recipients younger than age 65 years had better 1-year survival. Long-term morbidity and mortality in the liver transplant recipient is affected by many factors, including renal function, disease recurrence, and cardiovascular comorbidities -- the latter of which may account for 30% to 70% of clinical complications. McAvoy and colleagues[14] performed a retrospective analysis of 93 patients for 6-12 months post liver transplantation to assess the validity of the American College of Cardiology (ACC) guidelines, developed to identify patients at risk for cardiac disease. Predictors of cardiovascular risk were defined as having either (1) 2 or more of the following factors: obesity, hypertension, smoking, elevated total cholesterol, family history of premature cardiovascular disease, age older than 50 years; or (2) 1 of the following: previous myocardial infarction or cerebral vascular accident; abnormal echocardiogram; or evidence of an arrhythmia, left bundle branch block, or ST or T wave changes on ECG. In the follow-up period, 10% of patients had cardiac events, with 2 deaths attributed to cardiovascular disease. Preoperatively, according to ACC guidelines, 39% of the cohort had been identified as high risk, but only 50% of the cardiovascular events occurred in this group. Therefore, although a high percentage of transplant recipients have cardiac events in the posttransplant period, the cause is most likely multifactorial and difficult to predict based on more traditional risk factors. Acute liver failure has a high associated mortality, and cerebral edema with subsequent herniation may occur due to osmotic disturbances in cortical astrocytes that results in metabolic alterations and oxidative stress, triggering cerebral blood flow.[15] Thus, predicting which patients have cerebral edema is important in making the clinical decision to proceed with liver transplantation, because persistent cerebral edema may portend poor neurologic recovery post transplant. Bernal and colleagues[16] studied the role of serum arterial ammonia measurements in acute liver failure as a predictor of elevated intracranial pressure in 62 patients admitted to their center. The serum arterial ammonia levels were significantly higher in those acute liver failure patients with elevated intracranial pressures (155 micromoles/L [263.9 mcg/dL] vs 116; P < .02), and correlated with peak intracranial pressure -- findings consistent with those from a previous study suggesting that arterial ammonia level > 200 mcg/dL in patients with stage III/IV encephalopathy was associated with cerebral herniation.[17] Hepatitis B continues to be an important indication for liver transplantation, and with adequate antiviral therapy and the use of hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG), survival post liver transplant is excellent, with low rates of HBV recurrence. Nucleoside and nucleotide analogues, such as adefovir, are now used in the posttransplant setting. Lok and colleagues[18] reported on virologic response rates and adefovir resistance in patients enrolled into the NIH-HBV OLT (National Institutes of Health-Hepatitis B Virus Orthotopic Liver Transplantation) study. Sixty-one patients who received adefovir and had at least 6 months of follow-up were included in their analysis. Of those patients who had prior lamivudine therapy (57/61), 12 were switched to adefovir monotherapy, and 45 received combination lamivudine and adefovir. Only 54% of patients achieved an initial virologic response (HBV DNA < 4 log copies/mL after 6 months of adefovir treatment), and switching to adefovir monotherapy was significantly associated with the development of adefovir resistance compared with the addition of adefovir to existing lamivudine therapy (100% vs 15%; P = .001). The study authors concluded that combination therapy should be considered in all liver transplant patients to prevent sequential antiviral resistance. Recent use of alcohol and drugs is a relative contraindication to liver transplantation at most transplant centers, and most centers require 6 months of documented abstinence prior to procedure. Compliance with medical treatment and immunosuppression regimens as well as recidivism are the most pressing concerns related to nonabstinence. Nuessler and colleagues[19] retrospectively studied the outcome in 300 patients who underwent liver transplantation for alcoholic cirrhosis; subjects were followed for a median of 78 months. Survival rates in this overall cohort were excellent (96% at 1 year, 90% at 3 years, and 73% at 10 years), although long-term survival was shorter in those who had resumed drinking (54% vs 82%; P = .01). Nineteen percent of patients had recurrent alcoholism and 52% of those who resumed drinking developed recurrent cirrhosis. The significant factors leading to recidivism included abstinence for less than 6 months, poor pretransplant psychiatric assessment, and weak familial ties. Although mortality may be high in severe acute alcoholic hepatitis, additional studies are warranted to justify organ allocation to this controversial population of patients. Liver biopsy is currently the gold standard for assessing the etiology of hepatic dysfunction, disease progression, transplant rejection, and for staging/grading of inflammation and fibrosis. In the transplant recipient, this assessment is even more critical because changes in treatment or immunosuppression may ensue. Newer, noninvasive modalities to assess fibrosis, including transient elastography, are undergoing evaluation for their potential to yield information without the risk of biopsy. During this year's meeting, Barrault and colleagues[20] presented their results using transient elastography to assess fibrosis in a cohort of liver transplant recipients, 73% of whom were transplanted for HCV infection. The study authors reported a good correlation between identification of fibrosis by transient elastography compared with results of liver biopsy performed at the same time. They suggested that this noninvasive modality may be used to follow fibrosis progression in the post liver transplant setting. Thus, transient elastography warrants additional study; however, this tool would have no applicability in the assessment of other concomitant processes (ie, rejection), which can be assessed with biopsy. Concluding Remarks Liver transplantation is the definitive treatment for acute and chronic liver failure and over the past 20 years has achieved remarkable success in patient survival. Current issues surround the maximization of a limited resource (ie, available donor organs) by the careful assessment of pretransplant risk of mortality, recurrence of disease, and risk factors for short-term morbidity and mortality in order to best select recipients. These studies are especially important in light of the increasing numbers of LDLTs performed, which put the healthy donor at risk for complications. Once the liver transplant is performed, clinical focus is shifted to maintaining long-term graft function and to preventing the need for retransplantation, particularly crucial in hepatitis C-infected recipients. *The US Food and Drug Administration has not approved this medication for this use. References<snip> http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/518703 _________________________________________________________________ Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! 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Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Medscape coverage of: 56th Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases | Complications of Cirrhosis Controversies in Liver Transplantation Tram T. Tran, MD Introduction Current controversies in liver transplantation continue to revolve around the disparity between available deceased donor organs and maximizing the available donor pool, difficult clinical scenarios of patient selection given limited donor resources, management strategies for hepatocellular carcinoma, and the treatment of long-term complications, including disease recurrence and other comorbidities. Many of these topics as well as results of ongoing research were the focus of key presentations during this year's meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. Expanding the Donor Pool Strategies aimed at expansion of the available number of liver grafts include the use of living donors for both pediatric and adult recipients, the splitting of 1 cadaveric organ for 2 recipients, and the use of " extended criteria " donors. These " extended criteria " grafts are those with risk factors for early or delayed graft dysfunction after transplantation and may include factors such as advanced-age donor, hemodynamic instability of donor requiring pressors, steatosis, viral hepatitis positivity, and the use of non-heart-beating donor (NHBD) grafts. Barshes and colleagues[1] examined the outcome of 120 NHBD transplants performed at their center since the implementation of MELD (Model for End-Stage Liver Disease) scoring as compared with those of recipients of heart-beating donor (HBD) grafts; subjects were matched for pretransplant criteria. Results showed 1-year patient survival rates of 80.9% vs 88.3% (P = ns) for the NHBD and HBD groups, respectively. Graft survival was lower in the NHBD group (65.3% vs 84.3; P = .02), with 8 retransplants required compared with 2 retransplants in the HBD cohort. Therefore, although there appeared to be some increased risk for graft loss among recipients of grafts from NHBDs requiring retransplantation, overall patient survival was acceptable. Hepatocellular Carcinoma -- Where Are We? Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an established indication for liver transplantation, with excellent patient and graft survival and low rates of recurrence when specific selection criteria are met. The Mazzaferro criteria[2] are the most widely used guidelines for transplantation for HCC (1 lesion, no greater than 5 cm, or up to 3 lesions, none greater than 3 cm), with excellent recurrence-free survival. However, recent data reported by Yao and colleagues[3] suggest that modest expansion of the current University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) criteria may still yield low HCC recurrence, while allowing more patients to be transplanted for HCC. The UCSF criteria propose the following guidelines for transplantation: a single lesion not exceeding 6.5 cm; or 2-3 lesions, none exceeding 4.5 cm, with total tumor diameter not greater than 8 cm. Yao and colleagues[4] presented the long-term follow-up of 23 patients meeting the UCSF criteria transplanted over a 4-year period and reported 1- and 4-year recurrence-free rates of 90% -- a finding not statistically different from rates reported for patients transplanted at earlier stages of tumor. Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) is a viable option for patients experiencing long waiting times for deceased donor liver transplants (DDLT), and has allowed for expansion of the available donor pool. Patients meeting criteria for transplantation for HCC are also candidates for LDLT, and the concern for disease progression in HCC often leads to rapid listing on the wait list and " fast-track " transplantation. Kulik and colleagues[5] evaluated the outcomes in 56 LDLT recipients transplanted for HCC vs 31 DDLT recipients and found that waiting time was significantly shorter for LDLT (162 vs 471 days, P < .0001). They also found that although tumor stage was the same for both cohorts, 3-year recurrence-free survival was 46% in the LDLT group compared with 79% in the DDLT group (P = .08), and a higher proportion of patients (42% vs 0%; P = .003) in the LDLT group had disease recurrence at 3 years. These findings suggest that " fast-tracking " patients with cancer to transplant may include more patients with aggressive tumor biology who would have otherwise been observed during a longer waiting period for transplant. Cirrhosis is a risk factor for the development of HCC. The only treatment options for HCC with acceptable recurrence-free survival include hepatic resection or liver transplantation. Given the long waiting times for liver transplantation, curative resection should be considered in selected patients. Some studies have suggested that the treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection post resection may reduce the risk for late HCC recurrence.[6] Chen and colleagues[7] reported results of a randomized multicenter study evaluating the efficacy of interferon* therapy in 264 patients with hepatitis B and C after resection for HCC, with a median follow-up of 42 months. Although interferon therapy was well tolerated, no difference in overall survival or recurrence-free survival was noted after 53 weeks of treatment. Retransplantation In the setting of lack of donor organ availability, increasing death rates on the waiting list for primary orthotopic liver transplantation, and the difficulties with recurrent disease, significant debate continues surrounding the issue of retransplantation. There is higher associated morbidity and mortality with retransplantation; however, at present, 4% of patients listed for liver transplantation are retransplant candidates with no other option. Pedersen and colleagues[8] assessed the applicability of the MELD score to assess wait-list mortality in retransplant candidates compared with primary transplant candidates. They extracted data from the UNOS (United Network for Organ Sharing) database and found that patients relisted had higher MELD scores (22 vs 14), but when adjusted for equivalent MELD scores, short-term wait-list mortality was slightly lower in the retransplant candidates than in the primary candidates. The study authors concluded that MELD score is an important determinant of wait-list mortality, and that patients listed for retransplant have equivalent wait-list mortality. The continuing controversy will concern not only predicting how soon a patient needs retransplantation based on the MELD score but also determining whom we should be transplanting. Hepatitis C is the leading indication for orthotopic liver transplantation worldwide, and with nearly universal reinfection of the graft, recurrent HCV disease is problematic clinically. HCV-related graft cirrhosis has been reported as high as 30% at 5 years.[9] At present, 40% of liver retransplants in the United States are due to recurrent HCV disease. Soule and colleagues[10] assessed outcomes in patients undergoing retransplantation for HCV-related disease compared with patients receiving a primary liver transplant. They found a significantly worse survival outcome at 5 years (60% vs 28%; P < .03) for patients undergoing retransplantation, with the leading cause of death after retransplant being recurrent HCV disease leading to liver failure. This study, along with many other reports, suggests that more strict selection criteria may be required when considering retransplantation in patients with aggressive HCV recurrence, although considerable controversy still exists in this arena. Comorbidities -- Adding to the Problem In a late-breaking abstract presented during these meeting proceedings, Foxton and colleagues[11] reported on 163 patients who underwent liver transplantation for HCV infection at their center between 1990 and 2004. Biopsies were performed in all subjects, and 33% of recipients were found to have advanced fibrosis within 6 years after transplantation. Factors strongly associated with progression to fibrosis included donor age greater than 55 years (P = .003), pretransplant diabetes (P = .03), and posttransplant diabetes (P = .00015). The combination of older donor age and diabetes status resulted in an 8-fold risk of fibrosis progression. This study yielded useful information regarding potential selection criteria for donors in HCV-infected individuals who appear at highest risk for severe recurrence, such as retransplant candidates. Renal dysfunction is associated with end-stage liver disease due to multifactorial etiologies, including liver-induced renal ischemia, and comorbidities such as hepatitis B and C. Hepatorenal syndrome, especially in the acute setting and requiring dialysis, is a poor prognostic indicator, with only 35% of patients surviving to liver transplant or discharge.[12] Dellon and colleagues[13] examined the impact of dialysis and older age on survival after liver transplantation and reported that in the MELD era, more recipients are on dialysis and require dual-organ transplantation (liver, kidney). More important, they found that among patients who were older than 65 years of age and on dialysis at the time of transplant, 1-year survival in the MELD era was worse for those receiving only a liver transplant (50%) than for those receiving liver and kidney transplants (67%). Across all groups, pre- and post MELD era, recipients younger than age 65 years had better 1-year survival. Long-term morbidity and mortality in the liver transplant recipient is affected by many factors, including renal function, disease recurrence, and cardiovascular comorbidities -- the latter of which may account for 30% to 70% of clinical complications. McAvoy and colleagues[14] performed a retrospective analysis of 93 patients for 6-12 months post liver transplantation to assess the validity of the American College of Cardiology (ACC) guidelines, developed to identify patients at risk for cardiac disease. Predictors of cardiovascular risk were defined as having either (1) 2 or more of the following factors: obesity, hypertension, smoking, elevated total cholesterol, family history of premature cardiovascular disease, age older than 50 years; or (2) 1 of the following: previous myocardial infarction or cerebral vascular accident; abnormal echocardiogram; or evidence of an arrhythmia, left bundle branch block, or ST or T wave changes on ECG. In the follow-up period, 10% of patients had cardiac events, with 2 deaths attributed to cardiovascular disease. Preoperatively, according to ACC guidelines, 39% of the cohort had been identified as high risk, but only 50% of the cardiovascular events occurred in this group. Therefore, although a high percentage of transplant recipients have cardiac events in the posttransplant period, the cause is most likely multifactorial and difficult to predict based on more traditional risk factors. Acute liver failure has a high associated mortality, and cerebral edema with subsequent herniation may occur due to osmotic disturbances in cortical astrocytes that results in metabolic alterations and oxidative stress, triggering cerebral blood flow.[15] Thus, predicting which patients have cerebral edema is important in making the clinical decision to proceed with liver transplantation, because persistent cerebral edema may portend poor neurologic recovery post transplant. Bernal and colleagues[16] studied the role of serum arterial ammonia measurements in acute liver failure as a predictor of elevated intracranial pressure in 62 patients admitted to their center. The serum arterial ammonia levels were significantly higher in those acute liver failure patients with elevated intracranial pressures (155 micromoles/L [263.9 mcg/dL] vs 116; P < .02), and correlated with peak intracranial pressure -- findings consistent with those from a previous study suggesting that arterial ammonia level > 200 mcg/dL in patients with stage III/IV encephalopathy was associated with cerebral herniation.[17] Hepatitis B continues to be an important indication for liver transplantation, and with adequate antiviral therapy and the use of hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG), survival post liver transplant is excellent, with low rates of HBV recurrence. Nucleoside and nucleotide analogues, such as adefovir, are now used in the posttransplant setting. Lok and colleagues[18] reported on virologic response rates and adefovir resistance in patients enrolled into the NIH-HBV OLT (National Institutes of Health-Hepatitis B Virus Orthotopic Liver Transplantation) study. Sixty-one patients who received adefovir and had at least 6 months of follow-up were included in their analysis. Of those patients who had prior lamivudine therapy (57/61), 12 were switched to adefovir monotherapy, and 45 received combination lamivudine and adefovir. Only 54% of patients achieved an initial virologic response (HBV DNA < 4 log copies/mL after 6 months of adefovir treatment), and switching to adefovir monotherapy was significantly associated with the development of adefovir resistance compared with the addition of adefovir to existing lamivudine therapy (100% vs 15%; P = .001). The study authors concluded that combination therapy should be considered in all liver transplant patients to prevent sequential antiviral resistance. Recent use of alcohol and drugs is a relative contraindication to liver transplantation at most transplant centers, and most centers require 6 months of documented abstinence prior to procedure. Compliance with medical treatment and immunosuppression regimens as well as recidivism are the most pressing concerns related to nonabstinence. Nuessler and colleagues[19] retrospectively studied the outcome in 300 patients who underwent liver transplantation for alcoholic cirrhosis; subjects were followed for a median of 78 months. Survival rates in this overall cohort were excellent (96% at 1 year, 90% at 3 years, and 73% at 10 years), although long-term survival was shorter in those who had resumed drinking (54% vs 82%; P = .01). Nineteen percent of patients had recurrent alcoholism and 52% of those who resumed drinking developed recurrent cirrhosis. The significant factors leading to recidivism included abstinence for less than 6 months, poor pretransplant psychiatric assessment, and weak familial ties. Although mortality may be high in severe acute alcoholic hepatitis, additional studies are warranted to justify organ allocation to this controversial population of patients. Liver biopsy is currently the gold standard for assessing the etiology of hepatic dysfunction, disease progression, transplant rejection, and for staging/grading of inflammation and fibrosis. In the transplant recipient, this assessment is even more critical because changes in treatment or immunosuppression may ensue. Newer, noninvasive modalities to assess fibrosis, including transient elastography, are undergoing evaluation for their potential to yield information without the risk of biopsy. During this year's meeting, Barrault and colleagues[20] presented their results using transient elastography to assess fibrosis in a cohort of liver transplant recipients, 73% of whom were transplanted for HCV infection. The study authors reported a good correlation between identification of fibrosis by transient elastography compared with results of liver biopsy performed at the same time. They suggested that this noninvasive modality may be used to follow fibrosis progression in the post liver transplant setting. Thus, transient elastography warrants additional study; however, this tool would have no applicability in the assessment of other concomitant processes (ie, rejection), which can be assessed with biopsy. Concluding Remarks Liver transplantation is the definitive treatment for acute and chronic liver failure and over the past 20 years has achieved remarkable success in patient survival. Current issues surround the maximization of a limited resource (ie, available donor organs) by the careful assessment of pretransplant risk of mortality, recurrence of disease, and risk factors for short-term morbidity and mortality in order to best select recipients. These studies are especially important in light of the increasing numbers of LDLTs performed, which put the healthy donor at risk for complications. Once the liver transplant is performed, clinical focus is shifted to maintaining long-term graft function and to preventing the need for retransplantation, particularly crucial in hepatitis C-infected recipients. *The US Food and Drug Administration has not approved this medication for this use. References<snip> http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/518703 _________________________________________________________________ Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today - it's FREE! http://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Medscape coverage of: 56th Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases | Complications of Cirrhosis Controversies in Liver Transplantation Tram T. Tran, MD Introduction Current controversies in liver transplantation continue to revolve around the disparity between available deceased donor organs and maximizing the available donor pool, difficult clinical scenarios of patient selection given limited donor resources, management strategies for hepatocellular carcinoma, and the treatment of long-term complications, including disease recurrence and other comorbidities. Many of these topics as well as results of ongoing research were the focus of key presentations during this year's meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. Expanding the Donor Pool Strategies aimed at expansion of the available number of liver grafts include the use of living donors for both pediatric and adult recipients, the splitting of 1 cadaveric organ for 2 recipients, and the use of " extended criteria " donors. These " extended criteria " grafts are those with risk factors for early or delayed graft dysfunction after transplantation and may include factors such as advanced-age donor, hemodynamic instability of donor requiring pressors, steatosis, viral hepatitis positivity, and the use of non-heart-beating donor (NHBD) grafts. Barshes and colleagues[1] examined the outcome of 120 NHBD transplants performed at their center since the implementation of MELD (Model for End-Stage Liver Disease) scoring as compared with those of recipients of heart-beating donor (HBD) grafts; subjects were matched for pretransplant criteria. Results showed 1-year patient survival rates of 80.9% vs 88.3% (P = ns) for the NHBD and HBD groups, respectively. Graft survival was lower in the NHBD group (65.3% vs 84.3; P = .02), with 8 retransplants required compared with 2 retransplants in the HBD cohort. Therefore, although there appeared to be some increased risk for graft loss among recipients of grafts from NHBDs requiring retransplantation, overall patient survival was acceptable. Hepatocellular Carcinoma -- Where Are We? Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an established indication for liver transplantation, with excellent patient and graft survival and low rates of recurrence when specific selection criteria are met. The Mazzaferro criteria[2] are the most widely used guidelines for transplantation for HCC (1 lesion, no greater than 5 cm, or up to 3 lesions, none greater than 3 cm), with excellent recurrence-free survival. However, recent data reported by Yao and colleagues[3] suggest that modest expansion of the current University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) criteria may still yield low HCC recurrence, while allowing more patients to be transplanted for HCC. The UCSF criteria propose the following guidelines for transplantation: a single lesion not exceeding 6.5 cm; or 2-3 lesions, none exceeding 4.5 cm, with total tumor diameter not greater than 8 cm. Yao and colleagues[4] presented the long-term follow-up of 23 patients meeting the UCSF criteria transplanted over a 4-year period and reported 1- and 4-year recurrence-free rates of 90% -- a finding not statistically different from rates reported for patients transplanted at earlier stages of tumor. Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) is a viable option for patients experiencing long waiting times for deceased donor liver transplants (DDLT), and has allowed for expansion of the available donor pool. Patients meeting criteria for transplantation for HCC are also candidates for LDLT, and the concern for disease progression in HCC often leads to rapid listing on the wait list and " fast-track " transplantation. Kulik and colleagues[5] evaluated the outcomes in 56 LDLT recipients transplanted for HCC vs 31 DDLT recipients and found that waiting time was significantly shorter for LDLT (162 vs 471 days, P < .0001). They also found that although tumor stage was the same for both cohorts, 3-year recurrence-free survival was 46% in the LDLT group compared with 79% in the DDLT group (P = .08), and a higher proportion of patients (42% vs 0%; P = .003) in the LDLT group had disease recurrence at 3 years. These findings suggest that " fast-tracking " patients with cancer to transplant may include more patients with aggressive tumor biology who would have otherwise been observed during a longer waiting period for transplant. Cirrhosis is a risk factor for the development of HCC. The only treatment options for HCC with acceptable recurrence-free survival include hepatic resection or liver transplantation. Given the long waiting times for liver transplantation, curative resection should be considered in selected patients. Some studies have suggested that the treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection post resection may reduce the risk for late HCC recurrence.[6] Chen and colleagues[7] reported results of a randomized multicenter study evaluating the efficacy of interferon* therapy in 264 patients with hepatitis B and C after resection for HCC, with a median follow-up of 42 months. Although interferon therapy was well tolerated, no difference in overall survival or recurrence-free survival was noted after 53 weeks of treatment. Retransplantation In the setting of lack of donor organ availability, increasing death rates on the waiting list for primary orthotopic liver transplantation, and the difficulties with recurrent disease, significant debate continues surrounding the issue of retransplantation. There is higher associated morbidity and mortality with retransplantation; however, at present, 4% of patients listed for liver transplantation are retransplant candidates with no other option. Pedersen and colleagues[8] assessed the applicability of the MELD score to assess wait-list mortality in retransplant candidates compared with primary transplant candidates. They extracted data from the UNOS (United Network for Organ Sharing) database and found that patients relisted had higher MELD scores (22 vs 14), but when adjusted for equivalent MELD scores, short-term wait-list mortality was slightly lower in the retransplant candidates than in the primary candidates. The study authors concluded that MELD score is an important determinant of wait-list mortality, and that patients listed for retransplant have equivalent wait-list mortality. The continuing controversy will concern not only predicting how soon a patient needs retransplantation based on the MELD score but also determining whom we should be transplanting. Hepatitis C is the leading indication for orthotopic liver transplantation worldwide, and with nearly universal reinfection of the graft, recurrent HCV disease is problematic clinically. HCV-related graft cirrhosis has been reported as high as 30% at 5 years.[9] At present, 40% of liver retransplants in the United States are due to recurrent HCV disease. Soule and colleagues[10] assessed outcomes in patients undergoing retransplantation for HCV-related disease compared with patients receiving a primary liver transplant. They found a significantly worse survival outcome at 5 years (60% vs 28%; P < .03) for patients undergoing retransplantation, with the leading cause of death after retransplant being recurrent HCV disease leading to liver failure. This study, along with many other reports, suggests that more strict selection criteria may be required when considering retransplantation in patients with aggressive HCV recurrence, although considerable controversy still exists in this arena. Comorbidities -- Adding to the Problem In a late-breaking abstract presented during these meeting proceedings, Foxton and colleagues[11] reported on 163 patients who underwent liver transplantation for HCV infection at their center between 1990 and 2004. Biopsies were performed in all subjects, and 33% of recipients were found to have advanced fibrosis within 6 years after transplantation. Factors strongly associated with progression to fibrosis included donor age greater than 55 years (P = .003), pretransplant diabetes (P = .03), and posttransplant diabetes (P = .00015). The combination of older donor age and diabetes status resulted in an 8-fold risk of fibrosis progression. This study yielded useful information regarding potential selection criteria for donors in HCV-infected individuals who appear at highest risk for severe recurrence, such as retransplant candidates. Renal dysfunction is associated with end-stage liver disease due to multifactorial etiologies, including liver-induced renal ischemia, and comorbidities such as hepatitis B and C. Hepatorenal syndrome, especially in the acute setting and requiring dialysis, is a poor prognostic indicator, with only 35% of patients surviving to liver transplant or discharge.[12] Dellon and colleagues[13] examined the impact of dialysis and older age on survival after liver transplantation and reported that in the MELD era, more recipients are on dialysis and require dual-organ transplantation (liver, kidney). More important, they found that among patients who were older than 65 years of age and on dialysis at the time of transplant, 1-year survival in the MELD era was worse for those receiving only a liver transplant (50%) than for those receiving liver and kidney transplants (67%). Across all groups, pre- and post MELD era, recipients younger than age 65 years had better 1-year survival. Long-term morbidity and mortality in the liver transplant recipient is affected by many factors, including renal function, disease recurrence, and cardiovascular comorbidities -- the latter of which may account for 30% to 70% of clinical complications. McAvoy and colleagues[14] performed a retrospective analysis of 93 patients for 6-12 months post liver transplantation to assess the validity of the American College of Cardiology (ACC) guidelines, developed to identify patients at risk for cardiac disease. Predictors of cardiovascular risk were defined as having either (1) 2 or more of the following factors: obesity, hypertension, smoking, elevated total cholesterol, family history of premature cardiovascular disease, age older than 50 years; or (2) 1 of the following: previous myocardial infarction or cerebral vascular accident; abnormal echocardiogram; or evidence of an arrhythmia, left bundle branch block, or ST or T wave changes on ECG. In the follow-up period, 10% of patients had cardiac events, with 2 deaths attributed to cardiovascular disease. Preoperatively, according to ACC guidelines, 39% of the cohort had been identified as high risk, but only 50% of the cardiovascular events occurred in this group. Therefore, although a high percentage of transplant recipients have cardiac events in the posttransplant period, the cause is most likely multifactorial and difficult to predict based on more traditional risk factors. Acute liver failure has a high associated mortality, and cerebral edema with subsequent herniation may occur due to osmotic disturbances in cortical astrocytes that results in metabolic alterations and oxidative stress, triggering cerebral blood flow.[15] Thus, predicting which patients have cerebral edema is important in making the clinical decision to proceed with liver transplantation, because persistent cerebral edema may portend poor neurologic recovery post transplant. Bernal and colleagues[16] studied the role of serum arterial ammonia measurements in acute liver failure as a predictor of elevated intracranial pressure in 62 patients admitted to their center. The serum arterial ammonia levels were significantly higher in those acute liver failure patients with elevated intracranial pressures (155 micromoles/L [263.9 mcg/dL] vs 116; P < .02), and correlated with peak intracranial pressure -- findings consistent with those from a previous study suggesting that arterial ammonia level > 200 mcg/dL in patients with stage III/IV encephalopathy was associated with cerebral herniation.[17] Hepatitis B continues to be an important indication for liver transplantation, and with adequate antiviral therapy and the use of hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG), survival post liver transplant is excellent, with low rates of HBV recurrence. Nucleoside and nucleotide analogues, such as adefovir, are now used in the posttransplant setting. Lok and colleagues[18] reported on virologic response rates and adefovir resistance in patients enrolled into the NIH-HBV OLT (National Institutes of Health-Hepatitis B Virus Orthotopic Liver Transplantation) study. Sixty-one patients who received adefovir and had at least 6 months of follow-up were included in their analysis. Of those patients who had prior lamivudine therapy (57/61), 12 were switched to adefovir monotherapy, and 45 received combination lamivudine and adefovir. Only 54% of patients achieved an initial virologic response (HBV DNA < 4 log copies/mL after 6 months of adefovir treatment), and switching to adefovir monotherapy was significantly associated with the development of adefovir resistance compared with the addition of adefovir to existing lamivudine therapy (100% vs 15%; P = .001). The study authors concluded that combination therapy should be considered in all liver transplant patients to prevent sequential antiviral resistance. Recent use of alcohol and drugs is a relative contraindication to liver transplantation at most transplant centers, and most centers require 6 months of documented abstinence prior to procedure. Compliance with medical treatment and immunosuppression regimens as well as recidivism are the most pressing concerns related to nonabstinence. Nuessler and colleagues[19] retrospectively studied the outcome in 300 patients who underwent liver transplantation for alcoholic cirrhosis; subjects were followed for a median of 78 months. Survival rates in this overall cohort were excellent (96% at 1 year, 90% at 3 years, and 73% at 10 years), although long-term survival was shorter in those who had resumed drinking (54% vs 82%; P = .01). Nineteen percent of patients had recurrent alcoholism and 52% of those who resumed drinking developed recurrent cirrhosis. The significant factors leading to recidivism included abstinence for less than 6 months, poor pretransplant psychiatric assessment, and weak familial ties. Although mortality may be high in severe acute alcoholic hepatitis, additional studies are warranted to justify organ allocation to this controversial population of patients. Liver biopsy is currently the gold standard for assessing the etiology of hepatic dysfunction, disease progression, transplant rejection, and for staging/grading of inflammation and fibrosis. In the transplant recipient, this assessment is even more critical because changes in treatment or immunosuppression may ensue. Newer, noninvasive modalities to assess fibrosis, including transient elastography, are undergoing evaluation for their potential to yield information without the risk of biopsy. During this year's meeting, Barrault and colleagues[20] presented their results using transient elastography to assess fibrosis in a cohort of liver transplant recipients, 73% of whom were transplanted for HCV infection. The study authors reported a good correlation between identification of fibrosis by transient elastography compared with results of liver biopsy performed at the same time. They suggested that this noninvasive modality may be used to follow fibrosis progression in the post liver transplant setting. Thus, transient elastography warrants additional study; however, this tool would have no applicability in the assessment of other concomitant processes (ie, rejection), which can be assessed with biopsy. Concluding Remarks Liver transplantation is the definitive treatment for acute and chronic liver failure and over the past 20 years has achieved remarkable success in patient survival. Current issues surround the maximization of a limited resource (ie, available donor organs) by the careful assessment of pretransplant risk of mortality, recurrence of disease, and risk factors for short-term morbidity and mortality in order to best select recipients. These studies are especially important in light of the increasing numbers of LDLTs performed, which put the healthy donor at risk for complications. Once the liver transplant is performed, clinical focus is shifted to maintaining long-term graft function and to preventing the need for retransplantation, particularly crucial in hepatitis C-infected recipients. *The US Food and Drug Administration has not approved this medication for this use. References<snip> http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/518703 _________________________________________________________________ Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! 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Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Medscape coverage of: 56th Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases | Complications of Cirrhosis Controversies in Liver Transplantation Tram T. Tran, MD Introduction Current controversies in liver transplantation continue to revolve around the disparity between available deceased donor organs and maximizing the available donor pool, difficult clinical scenarios of patient selection given limited donor resources, management strategies for hepatocellular carcinoma, and the treatment of long-term complications, including disease recurrence and other comorbidities. Many of these topics as well as results of ongoing research were the focus of key presentations during this year's meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. Expanding the Donor Pool Strategies aimed at expansion of the available number of liver grafts include the use of living donors for both pediatric and adult recipients, the splitting of 1 cadaveric organ for 2 recipients, and the use of " extended criteria " donors. These " extended criteria " grafts are those with risk factors for early or delayed graft dysfunction after transplantation and may include factors such as advanced-age donor, hemodynamic instability of donor requiring pressors, steatosis, viral hepatitis positivity, and the use of non-heart-beating donor (NHBD) grafts. Barshes and colleagues[1] examined the outcome of 120 NHBD transplants performed at their center since the implementation of MELD (Model for End-Stage Liver Disease) scoring as compared with those of recipients of heart-beating donor (HBD) grafts; subjects were matched for pretransplant criteria. Results showed 1-year patient survival rates of 80.9% vs 88.3% (P = ns) for the NHBD and HBD groups, respectively. Graft survival was lower in the NHBD group (65.3% vs 84.3; P = .02), with 8 retransplants required compared with 2 retransplants in the HBD cohort. Therefore, although there appeared to be some increased risk for graft loss among recipients of grafts from NHBDs requiring retransplantation, overall patient survival was acceptable. Hepatocellular Carcinoma -- Where Are We? Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an established indication for liver transplantation, with excellent patient and graft survival and low rates of recurrence when specific selection criteria are met. The Mazzaferro criteria[2] are the most widely used guidelines for transplantation for HCC (1 lesion, no greater than 5 cm, or up to 3 lesions, none greater than 3 cm), with excellent recurrence-free survival. However, recent data reported by Yao and colleagues[3] suggest that modest expansion of the current University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) criteria may still yield low HCC recurrence, while allowing more patients to be transplanted for HCC. The UCSF criteria propose the following guidelines for transplantation: a single lesion not exceeding 6.5 cm; or 2-3 lesions, none exceeding 4.5 cm, with total tumor diameter not greater than 8 cm. Yao and colleagues[4] presented the long-term follow-up of 23 patients meeting the UCSF criteria transplanted over a 4-year period and reported 1- and 4-year recurrence-free rates of 90% -- a finding not statistically different from rates reported for patients transplanted at earlier stages of tumor. Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) is a viable option for patients experiencing long waiting times for deceased donor liver transplants (DDLT), and has allowed for expansion of the available donor pool. Patients meeting criteria for transplantation for HCC are also candidates for LDLT, and the concern for disease progression in HCC often leads to rapid listing on the wait list and " fast-track " transplantation. Kulik and colleagues[5] evaluated the outcomes in 56 LDLT recipients transplanted for HCC vs 31 DDLT recipients and found that waiting time was significantly shorter for LDLT (162 vs 471 days, P < .0001). They also found that although tumor stage was the same for both cohorts, 3-year recurrence-free survival was 46% in the LDLT group compared with 79% in the DDLT group (P = .08), and a higher proportion of patients (42% vs 0%; P = .003) in the LDLT group had disease recurrence at 3 years. These findings suggest that " fast-tracking " patients with cancer to transplant may include more patients with aggressive tumor biology who would have otherwise been observed during a longer waiting period for transplant. Cirrhosis is a risk factor for the development of HCC. The only treatment options for HCC with acceptable recurrence-free survival include hepatic resection or liver transplantation. Given the long waiting times for liver transplantation, curative resection should be considered in selected patients. Some studies have suggested that the treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection post resection may reduce the risk for late HCC recurrence.[6] Chen and colleagues[7] reported results of a randomized multicenter study evaluating the efficacy of interferon* therapy in 264 patients with hepatitis B and C after resection for HCC, with a median follow-up of 42 months. Although interferon therapy was well tolerated, no difference in overall survival or recurrence-free survival was noted after 53 weeks of treatment. Retransplantation In the setting of lack of donor organ availability, increasing death rates on the waiting list for primary orthotopic liver transplantation, and the difficulties with recurrent disease, significant debate continues surrounding the issue of retransplantation. There is higher associated morbidity and mortality with retransplantation; however, at present, 4% of patients listed for liver transplantation are retransplant candidates with no other option. Pedersen and colleagues[8] assessed the applicability of the MELD score to assess wait-list mortality in retransplant candidates compared with primary transplant candidates. They extracted data from the UNOS (United Network for Organ Sharing) database and found that patients relisted had higher MELD scores (22 vs 14), but when adjusted for equivalent MELD scores, short-term wait-list mortality was slightly lower in the retransplant candidates than in the primary candidates. The study authors concluded that MELD score is an important determinant of wait-list mortality, and that patients listed for retransplant have equivalent wait-list mortality. The continuing controversy will concern not only predicting how soon a patient needs retransplantation based on the MELD score but also determining whom we should be transplanting. Hepatitis C is the leading indication for orthotopic liver transplantation worldwide, and with nearly universal reinfection of the graft, recurrent HCV disease is problematic clinically. HCV-related graft cirrhosis has been reported as high as 30% at 5 years.[9] At present, 40% of liver retransplants in the United States are due to recurrent HCV disease. Soule and colleagues[10] assessed outcomes in patients undergoing retransplantation for HCV-related disease compared with patients receiving a primary liver transplant. They found a significantly worse survival outcome at 5 years (60% vs 28%; P < .03) for patients undergoing retransplantation, with the leading cause of death after retransplant being recurrent HCV disease leading to liver failure. This study, along with many other reports, suggests that more strict selection criteria may be required when considering retransplantation in patients with aggressive HCV recurrence, although considerable controversy still exists in this arena. Comorbidities -- Adding to the Problem In a late-breaking abstract presented during these meeting proceedings, Foxton and colleagues[11] reported on 163 patients who underwent liver transplantation for HCV infection at their center between 1990 and 2004. Biopsies were performed in all subjects, and 33% of recipients were found to have advanced fibrosis within 6 years after transplantation. Factors strongly associated with progression to fibrosis included donor age greater than 55 years (P = .003), pretransplant diabetes (P = .03), and posttransplant diabetes (P = .00015). The combination of older donor age and diabetes status resulted in an 8-fold risk of fibrosis progression. This study yielded useful information regarding potential selection criteria for donors in HCV-infected individuals who appear at highest risk for severe recurrence, such as retransplant candidates. Renal dysfunction is associated with end-stage liver disease due to multifactorial etiologies, including liver-induced renal ischemia, and comorbidities such as hepatitis B and C. Hepatorenal syndrome, especially in the acute setting and requiring dialysis, is a poor prognostic indicator, with only 35% of patients surviving to liver transplant or discharge.[12] Dellon and colleagues[13] examined the impact of dialysis and older age on survival after liver transplantation and reported that in the MELD era, more recipients are on dialysis and require dual-organ transplantation (liver, kidney). More important, they found that among patients who were older than 65 years of age and on dialysis at the time of transplant, 1-year survival in the MELD era was worse for those receiving only a liver transplant (50%) than for those receiving liver and kidney transplants (67%). Across all groups, pre- and post MELD era, recipients younger than age 65 years had better 1-year survival. Long-term morbidity and mortality in the liver transplant recipient is affected by many factors, including renal function, disease recurrence, and cardiovascular comorbidities -- the latter of which may account for 30% to 70% of clinical complications. McAvoy and colleagues[14] performed a retrospective analysis of 93 patients for 6-12 months post liver transplantation to assess the validity of the American College of Cardiology (ACC) guidelines, developed to identify patients at risk for cardiac disease. Predictors of cardiovascular risk were defined as having either (1) 2 or more of the following factors: obesity, hypertension, smoking, elevated total cholesterol, family history of premature cardiovascular disease, age older than 50 years; or (2) 1 of the following: previous myocardial infarction or cerebral vascular accident; abnormal echocardiogram; or evidence of an arrhythmia, left bundle branch block, or ST or T wave changes on ECG. In the follow-up period, 10% of patients had cardiac events, with 2 deaths attributed to cardiovascular disease. Preoperatively, according to ACC guidelines, 39% of the cohort had been identified as high risk, but only 50% of the cardiovascular events occurred in this group. Therefore, although a high percentage of transplant recipients have cardiac events in the posttransplant period, the cause is most likely multifactorial and difficult to predict based on more traditional risk factors. Acute liver failure has a high associated mortality, and cerebral edema with subsequent herniation may occur due to osmotic disturbances in cortical astrocytes that results in metabolic alterations and oxidative stress, triggering cerebral blood flow.[15] Thus, predicting which patients have cerebral edema is important in making the clinical decision to proceed with liver transplantation, because persistent cerebral edema may portend poor neurologic recovery post transplant. Bernal and colleagues[16] studied the role of serum arterial ammonia measurements in acute liver failure as a predictor of elevated intracranial pressure in 62 patients admitted to their center. The serum arterial ammonia levels were significantly higher in those acute liver failure patients with elevated intracranial pressures (155 micromoles/L [263.9 mcg/dL] vs 116; P < .02), and correlated with peak intracranial pressure -- findings consistent with those from a previous study suggesting that arterial ammonia level > 200 mcg/dL in patients with stage III/IV encephalopathy was associated with cerebral herniation.[17] Hepatitis B continues to be an important indication for liver transplantation, and with adequate antiviral therapy and the use of hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG), survival post liver transplant is excellent, with low rates of HBV recurrence. Nucleoside and nucleotide analogues, such as adefovir, are now used in the posttransplant setting. Lok and colleagues[18] reported on virologic response rates and adefovir resistance in patients enrolled into the NIH-HBV OLT (National Institutes of Health-Hepatitis B Virus Orthotopic Liver Transplantation) study. Sixty-one patients who received adefovir and had at least 6 months of follow-up were included in their analysis. Of those patients who had prior lamivudine therapy (57/61), 12 were switched to adefovir monotherapy, and 45 received combination lamivudine and adefovir. Only 54% of patients achieved an initial virologic response (HBV DNA < 4 log copies/mL after 6 months of adefovir treatment), and switching to adefovir monotherapy was significantly associated with the development of adefovir resistance compared with the addition of adefovir to existing lamivudine therapy (100% vs 15%; P = .001). The study authors concluded that combination therapy should be considered in all liver transplant patients to prevent sequential antiviral resistance. Recent use of alcohol and drugs is a relative contraindication to liver transplantation at most transplant centers, and most centers require 6 months of documented abstinence prior to procedure. Compliance with medical treatment and immunosuppression regimens as well as recidivism are the most pressing concerns related to nonabstinence. Nuessler and colleagues[19] retrospectively studied the outcome in 300 patients who underwent liver transplantation for alcoholic cirrhosis; subjects were followed for a median of 78 months. Survival rates in this overall cohort were excellent (96% at 1 year, 90% at 3 years, and 73% at 10 years), although long-term survival was shorter in those who had resumed drinking (54% vs 82%; P = .01). Nineteen percent of patients had recurrent alcoholism and 52% of those who resumed drinking developed recurrent cirrhosis. The significant factors leading to recidivism included abstinence for less than 6 months, poor pretransplant psychiatric assessment, and weak familial ties. Although mortality may be high in severe acute alcoholic hepatitis, additional studies are warranted to justify organ allocation to this controversial population of patients. Liver biopsy is currently the gold standard for assessing the etiology of hepatic dysfunction, disease progression, transplant rejection, and for staging/grading of inflammation and fibrosis. In the transplant recipient, this assessment is even more critical because changes in treatment or immunosuppression may ensue. Newer, noninvasive modalities to assess fibrosis, including transient elastography, are undergoing evaluation for their potential to yield information without the risk of biopsy. During this year's meeting, Barrault and colleagues[20] presented their results using transient elastography to assess fibrosis in a cohort of liver transplant recipients, 73% of whom were transplanted for HCV infection. The study authors reported a good correlation between identification of fibrosis by transient elastography compared with results of liver biopsy performed at the same time. They suggested that this noninvasive modality may be used to follow fibrosis progression in the post liver transplant setting. Thus, transient elastography warrants additional study; however, this tool would have no applicability in the assessment of other concomitant processes (ie, rejection), which can be assessed with biopsy. Concluding Remarks Liver transplantation is the definitive treatment for acute and chronic liver failure and over the past 20 years has achieved remarkable success in patient survival. Current issues surround the maximization of a limited resource (ie, available donor organs) by the careful assessment of pretransplant risk of mortality, recurrence of disease, and risk factors for short-term morbidity and mortality in order to best select recipients. These studies are especially important in light of the increasing numbers of LDLTs performed, which put the healthy donor at risk for complications. Once the liver transplant is performed, clinical focus is shifted to maintaining long-term graft function and to preventing the need for retransplantation, particularly crucial in hepatitis C-infected recipients. *The US Food and Drug Administration has not approved this medication for this use. References<snip> http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/518703 _________________________________________________________________ Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! 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