Assessing the Impact of Suboptimal Donor Characteristics on Mortality After Liver Transplantation: A Time-dependent Analysis Comparing HCC With Non-HCC Patients.

David Wallace; Kate Walker ORCID logo; Susan Charman; Abid Suddle; Alex Gimson; Ian Rowe; Chris Callaghan; Tom Cowling ORCID logo; Nigel Heaton; Jan van der Meulen ORCID logo; (2019) Assessing the Impact of Suboptimal Donor Characteristics on Mortality After Liver Transplantation: A Time-dependent Analysis Comparing HCC With Non-HCC Patients. Transplantation, 103 (4). e89-e98. ISSN 0041-1337 DOI: 10.1097/TP.0000000000002559
Copy

BACKGROUND: Patients who receive a liver transplant for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) often receive poorer-quality livers. Tumor recurrence also has a negative effect on posttransplant outcomes. We compared mortality of HCC and non-HCC recipients in different posttransplant time periods (epochs) to separate the impact of these different risk factors on short-term and longer-term posttransplant survival. METHODS: We identified a population-based cohort of first-time liver transplant recipients (aged ≥16 years) between 2008 and 2016 in the United Kingdom. We used Cox regression to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) comparing posttransplant mortality between HCC and non-HCC patients in 3 posttransplant epochs: 0 to 90 days, 90 days to 2 years, and 2 to 5 years, with adjustment first for recipient and later also for donor characteristics. RESULTS: One thousand two hundred seventy HCC and 3657 non-HCC transplant recipients were included. Five-year posttransplant survival was 74.5% (95% confidence interval [CI] 71.2%-77.5%) in HCC patients and 84.6% (83.0%-86.1%) in non-HCC patients. With adjustment for recipient characteristics only, mortality of HCC patients was lower but not statistically significantly different in the first 90 days (HR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.53-1.09; P = 0.11), but significantly higher thereafter (90 days to 2 years: HR, 1.99; 95% CI, 1.48-2.66; P < 0.001; 2 to 5 years HR, 1.77; 95% CI, 1.30-2.42; P < 0.001). Further adjustment for donor characteristics had little impact on these results. CONCLUSIONS: HCC recipients have poorer 5-year posttransplant survival than non-HCC recipients, most likely because of tumor recurrence. The more frequent use of poorer-quality donor organs for HCC does not explain this difference.


picture_as_pdf
Wallace-etal-2019-Assessing-the-impact-of-suboptimal-donor.pdf
subject
Accepted Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC-ND 3.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads