Abstract

The impact of donor age on the recurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) after liver transplantation is still debated. Between 2002 and 2014, all patients transplanted for HCC in 2 European liver transplantation tertiary centres were retrospectively reviewed. Risk factors for HCC recurrence were assessed using competing risk analysis, and the impact of donor age < or ≥65years and < or ≥80years was specifically evaluated after propensity score matching. 728 patients transplanted with a median follow-up of 86months were analysed. The 1-, 3- and 5-year recurrence rates were 4.9%, 10.7% and 13.9%, respectively. In multivariable analysis, recipient age (sHR: 0.96 [0.93; 0.98], P<0.01), number of lesions (sHR: 1.05 [1.04; 1.06], P<0.001), maximum size of the lesions (sHR: 1.37 [1.27; 1.48], P<0.01), presence of a hepatocholangiocarcinoma (sHR: 6.47 [2.91; 14.38], P<0.01) and microvascular invasion (sHR: 3.48 [2.42; 5.02], P<0.01) were significantly associated with HCC recurrence. After propensity score matching, neither donor age ≥65 (P=0.29) nor donor age ≥80 (P=0.84) years increased the risk of HCC recurrence. In conclusion, donor age was not found to be a risk factor for HCC recurrence. Patients listed for HCC can receive a graft from an elderly donor without compromising the outcome.

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