Adult living donor liver transplantation in Singapore: the Asian centre for liver diseases and transplantation experience

Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) has progressed dramatically in Asia due to the scarcity of cadaver donors and is increasingly performed in Singapore. The authors present their experience with adult LDLT. Adult LDLTs performed at the Asian Centre for Liver Diseases and Transplantation, Sing...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore Singapore, 2007-08, Vol.36 (8), p.623-630
Hauptverfasser: Polido, Jr, Wilfredo T, Lee, Kang Hoe, Tay, Khoon Hean, Wong, Sin Yew, Singh, Ranjodh, Leong, See Odd, Tan, Kai Chah
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container_end_page 630
container_issue 8
container_start_page 623
container_title Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore
container_volume 36
creator Polido, Jr, Wilfredo T
Lee, Kang Hoe
Tay, Khoon Hean
Wong, Sin Yew
Singh, Ranjodh
Leong, See Odd
Tan, Kai Chah
description Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) has progressed dramatically in Asia due to the scarcity of cadaver donors and is increasingly performed in Singapore. The authors present their experience with adult LDLT. Adult LDLTs performed at the Asian Centre for Liver Diseases and Transplantation, Singapore from 20 April 2002 until 20 March 2006 were reviewed. All patients received right lobe grafts and were managed by the same team throughout this period. Data were obtained by chart review. This study presents both recipient and donor outcomes in a single centre. A total of 65 patients underwent LDLT. Forty-three were genetically related while 22 were from emotionally-related donors. The majority were chronic liver failure while 14% were acute. The most common indication for LDLT was end-stage liver disease due to hepatitis B virus. A total of 22 patients with hepatoma were transplanted and overall 1-year disease specific survival was 94.4%. The mean model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) score was 17.4 +/- 9.4 (range, 6 to 40). Six patients had preoperative molecular adsorbent recycling system (MARS) dialysis with 83% transplant success rate. The mean follow-up was 479.2 days with a median of 356 days. One-year overall survival was 80.5%. There was 1 donor mortality and morbidity rate was 17%. Our series is in its early stage with good perioperative survival outcome with 1-month and 3-month actuarial survival rates of 95.4% and 87.3% respectively. The study demonstrates that LDLT can be done safely with good results for a variety of liver diseases. However, with dynamically evolving criteria and management strategies, further studies are needed to maximise treatment outcome.
doi_str_mv 10.47102/annals-acadmedsg.V36N8p623
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The authors present their experience with adult LDLT. Adult LDLTs performed at the Asian Centre for Liver Diseases and Transplantation, Singapore from 20 April 2002 until 20 March 2006 were reviewed. All patients received right lobe grafts and were managed by the same team throughout this period. Data were obtained by chart review. This study presents both recipient and donor outcomes in a single centre. A total of 65 patients underwent LDLT. Forty-three were genetically related while 22 were from emotionally-related donors. The majority were chronic liver failure while 14% were acute. The most common indication for LDLT was end-stage liver disease due to hepatitis B virus. A total of 22 patients with hepatoma were transplanted and overall 1-year disease specific survival was 94.4%. The mean model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) score was 17.4 +/- 9.4 (range, 6 to 40). Six patients had preoperative molecular adsorbent recycling system (MARS) dialysis with 83% transplant success rate. The mean follow-up was 479.2 days with a median of 356 days. One-year overall survival was 80.5%. There was 1 donor mortality and morbidity rate was 17%. Our series is in its early stage with good perioperative survival outcome with 1-month and 3-month actuarial survival rates of 95.4% and 87.3% respectively. The study demonstrates that LDLT can be done safely with good results for a variety of liver diseases. 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Six patients had preoperative molecular adsorbent recycling system (MARS) dialysis with 83% transplant success rate. The mean follow-up was 479.2 days with a median of 356 days. One-year overall survival was 80.5%. There was 1 donor mortality and morbidity rate was 17%. Our series is in its early stage with good perioperative survival outcome with 1-month and 3-month actuarial survival rates of 95.4% and 87.3% respectively. The study demonstrates that LDLT can be done safely with good results for a variety of liver diseases. 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subjects Adult
Female
Hospitals, Special
Humans
Liver Transplantation - mortality
Liver Transplantation - utilization
Living Donors
Male
Medical Audit
Middle Aged
Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
Perioperative Nursing
Singapore - epidemiology
Survival Rate
title Adult living donor liver transplantation in Singapore: the Asian centre for liver diseases and transplantation experience
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