Abstract

Hepatic artery thrombosis represents a potentially fatal complication following liver transplantation. Rates of hepatic artery thrombosis are significantly higher in children, with mortality reported up to 80 percent. Microsurgical anastomosis has been shown to decrease the rate of hepatic artery thrombosis and now represents the standard of care at the authors' institution. In this article, the authors present the largest study of its type directly comparing rates of hepatic artery thrombosis with and without microsurgical reconstruction of the hepatic artery. All pediatric patients who underwent primary orthotopic liver transplantation between 1989 and 2018 were included. Patients were divided into two cohorts: standard anastomosis with loupes, and microsurgical anastomosis under the operating microscope. The authors' primary outcome was the rate of hepatic artery thrombosis. Secondary outcomes were graft survival, patient survival, retransplantation rate, requirement for intraoperative blood products, and length of stay. Two hundred thirty-one children met criteria for inclusion. One hundred eighty cases were performed with loupe magnification and 51 cases were performed under the microscope. The hepatic artery thrombosis rate was lower, but not significantly so (p = 0.114), in the microsurgical group [n = 1 (2.0 percent)] compared with the standard cohort [n = 15 (8.3 percent)]. Survival analysis revealed a significant increase in graft survival with microsurgical anastomosis (p = 0.020), but not patient survival (p = 0.196). The retransplantation rate was significantly lower with microsurgical anastomosis (p = 0.021). Microsurgical anastomosis was associated with a clinically important decrease in hepatic artery thrombosis compared with standard loupe anastomosis. The graft survival rate was significantly higher in the microsurgical cohort, with a reduced retransplantation rate at 1 year. On this basis, the authors recommend microsurgical hepatic artery anastomosis in cases of pediatric liver transplantation. . Therapeutic, III.

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