Publication Type : Journal Article
Publisher : Elsevier BV
Source : Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hepatology
Url : https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jceh.2019.10.005
Keywords : acute liver failure, emergency live donor living transplantation, yellow phosphorous poisoning, hepatitis a virus-related acute liver failure, anti-tubercular treatment-induced acute liver failure, paediatric emergency liver transplant, survival following liver transplant for acute liver failure, auxiliary partial orthotopic liver transplant
Campus : Faridabad
School : School of Medicine
Year : 2020
Abstract : Background
 Acute liver failure (ALF) is the leading cause for emergency liver transplantation (LT) all over the world. We looked at the profile of cases who required LT for ALF from a single centre to identify the possible predictors of poor outcomes.
 
 Methodology
 During the 10-year period starting from 2007, 320 cases of ALF were treated at our institution, of which 70 (median age 24 years, Male:Female 1:2) underwent LT. Retrospective analyses of these 70 patients were performed.
 
 Results
 Etiology was identifiable in 73% (n = 51) of cases (yellow phosphorous [YP] poisoning [n = 16], Hepatitis A virus [HAV] [n = 15], Hepatitis B virus [HBV] [n = 5], Hepatitis E virus [HEV] [n = 1], anti-tubercular therapy [ATT] induced [n = 6], acute Wilson's [n = 3], and autoimmune [n = 5]]. Upon meeting King's College Hospital criteria, 69 had live donor LT (61 right lobe grafts, three left lobe grafts, five left lateral segment grafts) and one had deceased donor LT. Among these, there were five auxiliary partial orthotopic grafts and four ABO-incompatible transplants. Overall, 90-day mortality was 35.7% (n = 25), predominantly due to sepsis. Significant risk factors for mortality on multivariate analysis included indeterminate etiology, pre-op renal dysfunction, and Grade IV hepatic encephalopathy (HE). Cumulative 10-year survival of the remaining survivors was 95.6% (n = 45).
 
 Conclusion
 LT for ALF carries high perioperative mortality (35.7%) in those presenting with indeterminate etiology, pre-op renal dysfunction, and Grade IV HE. Nevertheless, if they survive the perioperative period, long-term survival is excellent.
Cite this Research Publication : Shweta Mallick, Krishnanunni Nair, Manoj Thillai, Kathirvel Manikandan, Pulkit Sethi, Durrairaj Madhusrinivasan, Shaji M. Johns, Sivasankara T. Binoj, Zubair Mohammed, Narayana M. Ramachandran, Dinesh Balakrishnan, Gopalakrishnan Unnikrishnan, Puneet Dhar, Othiyil V. Sudheer, Surendran Sudhindran, Liver Transplant in Acute Liver Failure – Looking Back Over 10 Years, Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hepatology, Elsevier BV, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jceh.2019.10.005