Abstract

Our Aim was to determine the impact of cirrhosis and the preoperative MELD score on the immediate postoperative mortality and hospital stay as well as survival at 1, 5, and 8 years in liver transplantation. Materials and methods Transplanted cirrhotic patients were selected who did not display some of the main known risk factors affecting recipient. Donor and surgical technique were included in this analysis. These exclusion criteria for recipient factors were emergency transplants and retransplants; for donor factors, age over 60 years, ischemia time over 10 hours, and moderate or severe steatosis on back-bench biopsy; and for surgery, prior complex upper abdominal surgery (mainly derivative and gastroduodenal surgery). Among 340 total liver transplants including 16 retransplants performed from March 1997 to December 2005, 197 patients met the selection criteria. The mean age of the recipients was 52 years (17–67) and the donors, 39 years (11–60). The transplant indication was cirrhosis in all cases: HCV in 69 cases (35%); alcohol in 55 (28%); hepatocarcinoma in 38 (19%); HBV in 19 (10%); PBC in 8 (4%), and other etiologies in 8 cases (4%). The MELD scores were divided as group 1, <10 points (33 cases = 17%); group 2, 10 to 18 points (136 cases = 69%); and group 3, >18 points (28 cases = 14%). The statistical analysis was performed with SPSS 11.0. Results Postoperative mortality (up to 3 months) was 16 cases (8%). The median ICU and hospital stays were 3 and 13.5 days, respectively. Overall survivals at 1, 5, and 8 years were 89%, 80%, and 77%, respectively. The survival for the same periods according to MELD group was 97%, 97%, and 97% for group 1; 87%, 76%, and 72% for group 2; and 85%, 81%, and 81% for group 3 ( P = NS). The survival according to the three main indications at 1, 5, and 8 years was: HCV, 91%, 80%, and 80%; alcohol, 87%, 80%, and 71%; and hepatocarcinoma, 84%, 80%, and 80% ( P = NS). No significant differences were observed among early deaths between MELD groups or transplant indications. Conclusions In a favorable liver transplant setting including acceptable donors, absence of prior complex abdominal surgery in the recipient, and nonemergency transplants, neither the cause of the cirrhosis nor its severity, as measured preoperatively by the MELD, were predictive of early postoperative death or long-term survival.

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