Abstract

Emergency transplantation for acute liver failure has a significantly inferior outcome than transplantations performed for elective indications. The severity of the pretransplantation clinical illness in this group will contribute to the reduced patient survival. We have reviewed the outcome of our first 100 consecutive adult patients who received transplants for acute liver failure and have evaluated and determined which recipient clinical parameters present on admission and at transplantation act as risk factors in early posttransplantation outcome. In patients who received transplants for nonacetaminophen-induced liver failure (n = 79), no static variable determinable on admission (including age, sex, year of transplantation, hospital admission to transplantation period, and fulminant or late-onset presentation) other than cause was predictive of 2-month patient survival. Fulminant Wilson's disease and idiosyncratic drug reactions with 2-month survival rates of 100% and 12.5%, respectively, had significantly different outcomes from other causes. By the time of transplantation, of four dynamic variables significant in a univariate analysis (serum creatinine, encephalopathy grade, Apache 111 and organ system failure scores, and P values < .05), only the creatinine level was an independent variable in a stepwise logistic regression for 2-month survival (r = .33). In patients who received transplants for acetaminophen hepatotoxicity (n = 21), overdose to hepatectomy period was the only significant static variable, with no parameter predictive of outcome present on admission.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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