The Impact of Extra-Anatomical Hepatic Artery Reconstruction during Living Donor Transplantation on Biliary Complications and Graft and Patient Survival
Transplantation, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul, Korea, Republic of
Meeting: 2019 American Transplant Congress
Abstract number: 230
Keywords: Anastomatic healing, Graft failure, Morbidity, Mortality
Session Information
Session Name: Concurrent Session: Liver Transplant Complications and Retransplantation I
Session Type: Concurrent Session
Date: Monday, June 3, 2019
Session Time: 2:30pm-4:00pm
Presentation Time: 3:30pm-3:42pm
Location: Ballroom A
*Purpose: This study was designed to analyze the feasibility of extra-anatomical hepatic artery reconstruction in living donor liver transplantation.
*Methods: Patients who underwent their first living donor liver transplantation at our center between January 2008 and December 2017 were reviewed. Hepatic artery reconstruction was classified as anatomical or extra-anatomical reconstruction. We compared the background characteristics and post-transplantation outcomes, including complications, biliary complications, graft survival, and overall survival. The potential risk factors for bile leakage was analyzed using multivariable logistic regression while risk factor for biliary stricture-free, graft, and overall survival were analyzed using multivariable Cox regression.
*Results: Among 800 patients, 35 (4.4%) underwent extra-anatomical reconstruction while seven patients (7/35, 20.0%) experienced hepatic artery complications after the initial anatomical reconstruction and required extra-anatomical reconstruction during reoperation. Patients who underwent extra-anatomical reconstruction (n=2/35, 5.7%) had a similar rate of hepatic artery complications compared to those who underwent anatomical reconstruction (n=46/772, 5.9%, P=0.699). Extra-anatomical reconstruction was a significant risk factor of bile leakage (OR=4.167, CI 1.928-9.006, P<0.001) along with multiple bile ducts (OR=1.606, CI=1.022-2.526, P=0.040), and hepaticojejunostomy. (OR=4.108, CI=2.190-7.707, P<0.001) However, extra-anatomical reconstruction had no statistical relationship to biliary stricture-free survival (HR=1.602, CI=0.982-2.613, P=0.059), graft survival (HR=1.745, CI=0.741-4.109, P=0.203), or overall survival (HR=1.405, CI=0.786-2.513, P=0.251). Hepatic artery complications were associated with poor biliary stricture-free survival (HR=2.060, CI=1.329-3.193, P=0.001), graft survival (HR=5.549, CI=2.883-10.681, P<0.001), and overall survival (HR=1.958, CI=1.195-3.206, P=0.008).
*Conclusions: Extra-anatomical hepatic artery reconstruction during living donor liver transplantation was not a risk factor of biliary stricture, graft failure, or overall survival.
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
Chung Y, Kim J, Kim S, Rhu J, Lee S, Lee K, Lee S, Choi G, Park J, Kim S, Joh J, Lee S. The Impact of Extra-Anatomical Hepatic Artery Reconstruction during Living Donor Transplantation on Biliary Complications and Graft and Patient Survival [abstract]. Am J Transplant. 2019; 19 (suppl 3). https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/the-impact-of-extra-anatomical-hepatic-artery-reconstruction-during-living-donor-transplantation-on-biliary-complications-and-graft-and-patient-survival/. Accessed November 22, 2024.« Back to 2019 American Transplant Congress