Identifying Predictors of Pediatric Heart Only versus Combined Heart-Liver Transplantation
Stanford University, Stanford, CA
Meeting: 2022 American Transplant Congress
Abstract number: 327
Keywords: Heart transplant patients, Liver cirrhosis, Liver transplantation, Pediatric
Topic: Clinical Science » Liver » 61 - Liver: Pediatrics
Session Information
Session Time: 5:30pm-7:00pm
Presentation Time: 6:00pm-6:10pm
Location: Hynes Room 311
*Purpose: A standardized protocol to identify which patients with Fontan failure require combined heart liver transplant (cHLT) versus isolated heart transplant (HT) has not yet been described. At our institution, we list patients with Fontan failure for cHLT if they have: stage 2 or greater fibrosis on liver biopsy and evidence of portal hypertension on imaging (splenomegaly and/or intra-abdominal varices and/or ascites) or varices on endoscopy. The liver is grossly inspected intra-operatively at the time of organ acceptance: if the appearance is cirrhotic, the recipient undergoes cHLT, otherwise isolated heart transplant (HT) is performed. We aimed to correlate pre-transplant markers with the intra-operative findings of cirrhosis to help better predict which patients proceed to cHLT.
*Methods: Between 2006-2021, 16 patients (median age 17 years, range 10-26) with Fontan failure and FALD were listed for cHLT and underwent either cHLT (n=12) or isolated HT (n=4). Descriptive statistics, Student’s t-test and Fisher’s exact test were used to analyze the data.
*Results: Patients with cirrhosis on intraoperative visual inspection who underwent cHLT had a significantly higher stage of hepatic fibrosis on pre-transplant histopathology (stage 3 vs. stage 1, p=0.04) compared to those without the intra-operative finding of cirrhosis who underwent HT only. There was no significant difference between groups for the following variables: time from Fontan in years, bilirubin, platelet count, INR off anticoagulation, ALT, or shear-wave ultrasound elastography. All patients who underwent cHLT had either: 1) stage 2 or greater hepatic fibrosis and 2 or more signs of portal hypertension (splenomegaly, varices and/or ascites); 2) stage 2 or greater hepatic fibrosis and polysplenia/asplenia and varices and ascites; or 3) no liver biopsy and 3 signs of portal hypertension (splenomegaly, varices and ascites). No patients who underwent HT alone met any of the above criteria. No patient with stage 1 hepatic fibrosis underwent cHLT.
*Conclusions: In the largest cohort of cHLT registrants and recipients, we found that the degree of hepatic fibrosis on pre-transplant histopathology combined with signs of portal hypertension predicted the gross finding of cirrhosis at the time of transplant. Better stratification and scoring tools to predict which patients with Fontan failure and FALD will benefit from cHLT are still needed. Our findings may help inform transplant decision making to better predict cHLT versus isolated HT.
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
Zhang K, Chen S, Syed A, Gallo A, Esquivel C, Bonham C, Hollander S, Ma M, Han J, Ebel N. Identifying Predictors of Pediatric Heart Only versus Combined Heart-Liver Transplantation [abstract]. Am J Transplant. 2022; 22 (suppl 3). https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/identifying-predictors-of-pediatric-heart-only-versus-combined-heart-liver-transplantation/. Accessed November 21, 2024.« Back to 2022 American Transplant Congress