Liver transplantation for biliary atresia: 19-year, single-center experience

In this study, we describe our 19-year experience with liver transplantation as the definitive treatment for congenital biliary atresia. We performed a retrospective study of 115 liver transplants from 1984 to 2003 in 85 patients with congenital biliary atresia. We determined the impact of era of tr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental and clinical transplantation 2004-06, Vol.2 (1), p.178-182
Hauptverfasser: Chin, L Thomas, D'Alessandro, Anthony M, Knechtle, Stuart J, Fernandez, Luis A, Leverson, Glen, Judd, Robert H, Spaith, Elizabeth, Dalgic, Aydin, Sollinger, Hans W, Kalayoglu, Munci
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In this study, we describe our 19-year experience with liver transplantation as the definitive treatment for congenital biliary atresia. We performed a retrospective study of 115 liver transplants from 1984 to 2003 in 85 patients with congenital biliary atresia. We determined the impact of era of transplantation (1984-1993 and 1994-2003), recipient age (< 1 and > 1), prior portoenterostomy, and type of surgery (whole-, reduced-, and split-liver transplant) on the outcome of the transplant. Overall long-term survival is 83%. Survival is greater in the more-recent era. No impact of age or prior portoenterostomy on survival was seen. Split-liver grafts showed superior graft survival, whereas reduced-liver transplants had the worst overall graft survival. Our results confirm that long-term patient survival after liver transplantation for congenital biliary atresia is excellent. When required, partial liver grafts provide excellent long-term outcome.
ISSN:1304-0855