Abstract

PurposeTo evaluate retrospectively the long-term outcome of percutaneous interventions for hepatic venous outflow obstruction (HVOO) occurring after pediatric living donor liver transplantation (LDLT). Materials and MethodsBetween October 1997 and December 2012, 48 patients (24 boys, 24 girls; median age, 6 y) who had undergone LDLT were confirmed to have HVOO using percutaneous hepatic venography and manometry. All patients underwent percutaneous interventions, including balloon angioplasty with or without stent placement. Technical success, clinical success, patency rates, stent placement, and major complications were evaluated. ResultsTechnical success was achieved in 92 of 93 sessions (99.0%) and in 47 of 48 patients (97.9%), and clinical success was achieved in 41 of 48 patients (85.4%). During the follow-up period (range, 1–182 mo; median, 51.5 mo), 28 patients were treated with a single session of balloon angioplasty, and 20 patients who developed recurrent stenosis were treated with repeated percutaneous interventions. The rates of primary and primary-assisted patency at 1, 3, 5, and 10 years after balloon angioplasty were 64%, 57%, 57%, and 52% (primary patency) and 98%, 95%, 95%, and 95% (primary-assisted patency). Of six patients with stent placement, four had no recurrent HVOO after the stent placement, but two developed recurrent stenosis. The stent migrated to the right atrium in one patient. ConclusionsPercutaneous interventions were effective treatments for HVOO after LDLT.

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