liver transplantation - cecentral

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Liver Transplantation Malay Shah, MD Surgical Director, Liver Transplantation Associate Professor of Surgery University of Kentucky Medical Center

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Page 1: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Liver Transplantation Malay Shah, MD Surgical Director, Liver Transplantation Associate Professor of Surgery University of Kentucky Medical Center

Page 2: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Financial Disclosures

Unfortunately, I have no financial commitments or relationships to disclose

Page 3: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

1.Discuss indications & contraindications for liver transplant 2. Review allocation of livers for transplantation 3. Discuss the MELD score and its implications for survival with and without transplant

Objectives

Page 4: Liver Transplantation - CECentral
Page 5: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Clinical Features of Cirrhosis

Page 6: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Clinical Features of Cirrhosis

Page 7: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Clinical Features of Cirrhosis

Page 8: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Clinical Features of Cirrhosis

Page 9: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Clinical Features of Cirrhosis

Page 10: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Clinical Features of Cirrhosis

Page 11: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

THIS ULTIMATELY LEADS TO…

Page 12: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

When is Liver Transplant Indicated?

Liver transplantation is indicated in cirrhotic patients when the risk of death without transplant exceeds the risk of death with transplant

Page 13: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Surgical Complications 1% mortality high morbidity

Infections Drug side effects Recurrence of liver disease: HCC,

HepC

Malignancy Risk: Non-melanoma skin CA: RR 30 Kidney: RR 9 HCC and Gyn cancers: RR 5 Bladder, Thyroid, Melanoma, and NHL:

RR 3 Colorectal, Lung: RR 2 Pancreas: RR 1.5 Breast: RR 1.1

10% one-yr mortality

When is Liver Transplant Indicated? Defining the Risks

Page 14: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

• Cirrhosis with hepatic decompensation and MELD score ≥ 15 (or Na-MELD ≥ 15): Hep B/C, EtOH, PBC, PSC, biliary atresia, AIH, NASH

• HCC within Milan criteria

• Fulminant liver failure

• MELD EXCEPTIONS : metastatic neuroendocrine tumor, hepatic hydrothorax, recurrent cholangitis, hepatopulmonary syndrome, etc.

Indications for Liver Transplant

Page 15: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Active EtOH use Illicit drug use

Active smoking Noncompliance

Dishonesty Active Malignancy (non-

HCC)

age > 65 COPD

CAD/CHF ESRD

BMI >35

Contraindications for Liver Transplant

Page 16: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

• 1985: European Liver Transplant Registry—38% due to HCC

• 5-year survival only 20%!

• 1996: only 10% due to HCC

Lancet 1999; 353: 1253

Hepatocellular Carcinoma Early Experiences with Transplant

Page 17: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Mezzaferro et al, N Eng J Med 1996

Milan Criteria

Historically, liver transplantation for HCC produced horrible results

Milan Criteria Solitary lesion <5cm Two or three lesions, all <3cm No extrahepatic disease 5 year survival rate equivilant to txp w/o HCC

Page 18: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

• 2002: 29 points for patients within Milan, and 24 points for stage I HCC (one tumor < 2cm)

• This was shown to give too high of a priority to HCC patients

and disadvantaged non-HCC patients

• Current policy: Patients listed with their calculated MELD score. After a 6 month wait period after listing, they will receive a score of 28.

MELD Exception Points for HCC

Page 19: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

all OLT HCC one year 84% 87%

five year 75% 67%

ten year 52% 49.5%

Hepatocellular Carcinoma Survival Compared to Non-HCC Recipients

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V. Mazzaferro et al., Ann Surg Oncol 2008;15(4):1001

Variable HR CI (95%) p-value Overall patient survival Milan criteria (in vs. out) 3.1 1.35-6.93 0.007 Tumor-free survival Milan criteria (in vs. out) 5.5 1.39-21.27 0.01 Microsatellites (yes vs. no) 3.6 1.5-8.71 0.004 Microvascular invasion (yes vs. no) 3.4 1.36-8.76 0.009 Tumor grade (G3 vs. G1-2) 3.4 1.04-11.14 0.04

Hepatocellular Carcinoma Prognostic Factors Affecting Survival

Page 21: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

1980s: waiting time and “level of care”

1996: disease severity using CTP

score

2002: disease severity using MELD (Model End-Stage Liver Disease)

score

Liver Allocation

Page 22: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Assessing perioperative morbidity and mortality in patients with cirrhosis

Class correlates with the frequency of post-operative complications: liver failure, worsening encephalopathy, bleeding, infection, renal failure, hypoxia, intractable ascites

Child-Turcotte-Pugh Score

Page 23: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Child-Turcotte-Pugh Score

Page 24: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Operative mortality: Class A: 10% Class B: 30% Class C: ~80%

Emergency surgery associated with higher mortality

General consensus for elective surgery:

Class A: elective surgery well tolerated Class B: permissible with preoperative preparation Class C: contraindicated

Child-Turcotte-Pugh Score

Page 25: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

5 factors contribute to score, 3 of which are non-modifiable (bilirubin, INR and albumin)

Great subjectivity in encephalopathy and ascites

Easy to “game the system” and increase your patient’s CTP score

Child-Turcotte-Pugh Score Limitations for Transplant

Page 26: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

MELD Score = (0.957 * ln(Serum Cr) + 0.378 * ln(Serum Bilirubin) + 1.120 * ln(INR) + 0.643 ) * 10

• INR • Creatinine • Total Bilirubin

• Range: 6 – 40

Model for End Stage Liver Disease Score (MELD)

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Goal = determine mortality rates for candidates compared to recipients

Liver Recipient Outcomes

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12,996 patients listed from 2001 – 2003

Liver Recipient Outcomes

Page 29: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Liver Recipient Outcomes

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Overall, recipients had 79% lower mortality risk than candidates waiting on the list MELD 18-20: 38% lower mortality risk MELD 40: 96% lower mortality risk

8X

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MELD 6

15

24

33

40

One yr survival without OLT

97%

86%

16%

<2%

<1%

One yr survival with OLT

86%

86%

84%

76%

74%

Page 32: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

• Hyponatremia has been shown to be an independent predictor of death

• Na-MELD = MELD + (135 – Na)*1.59

• Example: • MELD 10, Na 129: Na-MELD is 20

“Sodium MELD” Score

Page 33: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Kim WR et al. N Engl J Med 2008;359:1018-1026.

Page 34: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

Kim WR et al. N Engl J Med 2008;359:1018-1026.

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MELD can quantify mortality risk in cirrhotic patients post-operatively

Applies to abdominal, orthopaedic and cardiovascular operations

Mortality rates: MELD <7: ~6% MELD 8-11: ~10%

MELD 12-15: ~25%

MELD Score Correlation

Page 36: Liver Transplantation - CECentral

QUESTIONS?