Abstract
BackgroundTransient elastography has become a standard tool for the accurate non-invasive assessment of liver stiffness and fat content. Liver transplant recipients can develop allograft fibrosis during long-term follow-up despite normal or mildly abnormal liver chemistries. Tapering of immunosuppression in long-term liver transplant survivors is performed relying solely on liver chemistries. It is important to know if underlying liver histology would be abnormal or if rejection was present as this would alter the desire to decrease stable maintenance doses of immunosuppression. MethodsWe present our experience of five liver transplant recipients who had transient elastography performed prior to consideration of weaning of their immunosuppression. ResultsAll five patients showed signs of elevated liver stiffness on transient elastography in the setting of normal to slightly abnormal liver tests with very stable immunosuppressant doses. This prompted the performance of liver biopsies which demonstrated immune-mediated liver injury and thus negated the immunosuppression withdrawal. ConclusionTransient elastography has utility as a non-invasive method to evaluate allograft health in long-term liver transplant survivors and can be useful in the decision-making process for immunosuppression weaning.
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