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Racial Disparities in the Evaluation for Liver Transplantation.

M. Jesse, E. Goldstein, N. Rebhan, C.-X. Ho, T. Macaulay, M. Bebanic, L. Shkokani, D. Moonka, M. Abouljoud, A. Yoshida.

Transplant Institute, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI.

Meeting: 2016 American Transplant Congress

Abstract number: B65

Keywords: African-American, Liver, Mortality

Session Information

Session Name: Poster Session B: Disparities in Access and Outcomes

Session Type: Poster Session

Date: Sunday, June 12, 2016

Session Time: 6:00pm-7:00pm

 Presentation Time: 6:00pm-7:00pm

Location: Halls C&D

The majority of research on disparities in liver transplantation is on patients listed for transplant in the OPTN/UNOS database, not patients in the evaluation process for listing. This study reports the outcomes of liver transplant evaluations of Caucasian and African American patients at a single center. Method: Retrospective clinical chart review of patients referred for liver transplantation from January 2004 through December 2012. Results: 1,855 patient referrals, 78.8% (n=1,461) Caucasian and 21.2% (n=394) African American. Most frequent reasons for not listed were medical, patient failure to complete work-up, and patient expired during evaluation (Table 1). African Americans were more likely to not be listed and not be listed due to psychosocial contraindications. Of those not listed for psychosocial contraindications, frequencies of potential barriers (Table 2) indicate higher rates of chemical dependency issues and impaired cognitive functioning in African Americans with mental health and support concerns approaching significance. There were not differences between medical or insurance exclusions.

Table 1

Overall

Caucasian

African American

p

Listed

1003(54.1%)

815(55.8%)

188(47.7%)

<.01

Medical

467(24.2%)

360(24.6%)

107(27.2%)

.68

Medical contraindications

Expired during evaluation

Too healthy

256(13.8%)

130(7.0%)

81(4.4%)

201(13.8%)

99(6.8%)

60(4.1%)

55(14.0%)

31(7.9%)

21(5.3%)

.92

.45

.29

Psychosocial/Patient Behavior

318(17.1%)

231(15.8%)

87(22.1%)

<.01

Psychosocial contraindications

Patient failure to complete work-up

Patient terminated evaluation

111(6.0%)

148(8.0%)

59(3.2%)

76(5.2%)

105(7.2%)

50(3.4%)

35(8.9%)

43(10.9%)

9(2.3%)

<.01

.02

.25

Insurance

41(2.2%)

35(2.4%)

6(1.5%)

.29

Table 2

Caucasian

(n=76)

African American

(n=35)

p

Mental health

Chemical dependency

Support concerns

Cognitive concerns

37(2.8%)

63(4.6%)

29(2.1%)

34(2.5%)

17(4.8%)

30(8.0%)

14(3.8%)

17(4.7%)

.053

<.01

.07

.03

Conclusions: African Americans are significantly less likely to be listed for liver transplant than Caucasian patients. This is not due to medical issues or insurance, but rather psychosocial barriers. Identifying why African Americans are less likely to complete work-up and psychosocial contraindications will be important in addressing this disparity.

CITATION INFORMATION: Jesse M, Goldstein E, Rebhan N, Ho C.-X, Macaulay T, Bebanic M, Shkokani L, Moonka D, Abouljoud M, Yoshida A. Racial Disparities in the Evaluation for Liver Transplantation. Am J Transplant. 2016;16 (suppl 3).

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To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Jesse M, Goldstein E, Rebhan N, Ho C-X, Macaulay T, Bebanic M, Shkokani L, Moonka D, Abouljoud M, Yoshida A. Racial Disparities in the Evaluation for Liver Transplantation. [abstract]. Am J Transplant. 2016; 16 (suppl 3). https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/racial-disparities-in-the-evaluation-for-liver-transplantation/. Accessed May 10, 2025.

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