Liver Transplantation Basics

Liver Transplantation Basics

Liver Transplantation Basics

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Indications & Scores - Who Gets a Liver?

  • Acute Liver Failure (ALF):
    • King's College Criteria (KCC):
      • Acetaminophen: pH < 7.3 OR (INR > 6.5, Cr > 3.4 mg/dL, HE III/IV).
      • Non-acetaminophen: INR > 6.5 OR 3/5: (Age <10/>40, Jaundice >7d pre-enceph, INR > 3.5, Bili > 17 mg/dL, Unfavorable etiology).
  • Chronic Liver Disease (CLD):
    • MELD Score > 15. Uses Bilirubin, INR, Creatinine. (MELD-Na adds Sodium). $MELD = 3.78 \times \ln(\text{Serum Bilirubin mg/dL}) + 11.2 \times \ln(\text{INR}) + 9.57 \times \ln(\text{Serum Creatinine mg/dL}) + 6.43$
    • PELD Score for children < 12 yrs.
    • Complications: Refractory ascites, variceal bleeds, SBP, HE.
  • Contraindications:
    • Absolute: Sepsis, extrahepatic malignancy, severe cardiopulmonary disease, active substance abuse.
    • Relative: Age >70, BMI >40, controlled HIV, psychosocial issues.

⭐ MELD score incorporates objective parameters: serum bilirubin, serum creatinine, and INR for prothrombin time.

Donors & Allocation - The Gift Source

  • Deceased Donors (DD):
    • Donation after Brainstem Death (DBD): Preferred, heart-beating donor.
    • Donation after Circulatory Death (DCD): Non-heart-beating donor, e.g., Maastricht category III.
  • Living Donors (LD):
    • Strict Criteria: Age 18-55 years, BMI <30-35 kg/m², voluntary consent, psychological stability, adequate future liver remnant (>30% for donor, GRWR >0.8% for recipient), no significant comorbidities.
  • Essential Donor Evaluation:
    • Comprehensive medical, surgical, social history.
    • Serology: HIV, HBV, HCV, CMV, EBV.
    • Imaging: CT/MRI for liver anatomy, steatosis, volumetrics.
    • Liver biopsy: If steatosis or fibrosis suspected.
  • Allocation & Matching:
    • ABO Compatibility: Identical (e.g., A to A) or compatible (e.g., O to A/B/AB). ABO-incompatible (ABOi) is high-risk, requires desensitization.
    • MELD/PELD Score: Prioritizes sickest patients. MELD (Model for End-Stage Liver Disease) for adults; PELD (Pediatric ELD) for children <12 years. 📌 MELD: "BIC" (Bilirubin, INR, Creatinine).

    ⭐ The MELD score, ranging from 6 to 40, predicts 3-month mortality on the waiting list; higher scores indicate greater urgency.

The Operation - Swap & Stitch

  • Techniques:
    • Conventional: IVC cross-clamping, Veno-Venous Bypass (VVB).
    • Piggyback: Preserves recipient IVC, no VVB. ↓Hemodynamic instability.
  • Key Phases & Anastomoses:
  • Post-op Monitoring:
    • Hemodynamics: BP, HR, CVP.
    • Graft function: LFTs, INR, glucose.
    • Urine output: >0.5 ml/kg/hr.

⭐ Post-Reperfusion Syndrome (PRS): Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) ↓ >30% for >1 min within 5 min of graft reperfusion.

Post-Op Path - Guarding the Graft

Immunosuppression Strategy:

  • Phases:
    • Induction: Basiliximab, ATG. Prevents early rejection.
    • Maintenance: Lifelong. CNI (Tacrolimus) + Antimetabolite (MMF) ± Steroids. mTORi (Sirolimus) option.
    • Rejection Tx: Pulse steroids; ATG if steroid-resistant.
  • Key Drug Side Effects (📌):
    • CNIs: Nephro/Neurotoxic, HTN, DM. Cyclo: Gingival hyperplasia, Hirsutism.
    • MMF: GI distress, myelosuppression.
    • Steroids: Cushingoid, DM, osteoporosis.

Graft Rejection Types:

  • Hyperacute: Pre-formed Ab (ABO/HLA); mins-hrs.
  • Acute Cellular (ACR): T-cell; days-wks. Biopsy: Endotheliitis, portal inflammation, bile duct injury.
  • Antibody-Mediated (AMR): DSA; C4d+.
  • Chronic: Months-yrs; fibrosis, Vanishing Bile Duct Syndrome (VBDS).

Common Complications:

  • Vascular: Hepatic Artery Thrombosis (HAT) (early), PVT.
  • Biliary: Strictures, leaks.
  • Infections: CMV, fungal. Prophylaxis vital.
  • PTLD (EBV-driven).
  • Disease recurrence (HCV, HCC).

⭐ Hepatic Artery Thrombosis (HAT) is the most common early vascular complication, often leading to graft failure if not promptly addressed.

Immunosuppressive drug targets in T cell activation

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • MELD score is crucial for adult recipient prioritization, reflecting disease severity.
  • PELD score is used for pediatric recipients (<12 years), including growth factors.
  • Milan criteria (e.g., single HCC ≤5 cm) guide HCC transplant eligibility.
  • ABO blood group compatibility is mandatory; Rh matching is not a primary concern.
  • Commonest indication: Decompensated cirrhosis (e.g., viral hepatitis, alcoholic liver disease).
  • Standard immunosuppression: Tacrolimus (CNI), Mycophenolate Mofetil (antimetabolite), and steroids.
  • Biliary complications (strictures, leaks) are common technical issues post-transplant.

Practice Questions: Liver Transplantation Basics

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Solution currently used for liver preservation for transplantation is?

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Flashcards: Liver Transplantation Basics

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Next best step for a petient with bile duct injury in post-op period would be to _____ and administer broad spectrum abx

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Next best step for a petient with bile duct injury in post-op period would be to _____ and administer broad spectrum abx

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