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1.
Liver Transpl ; 2024 Jun 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38833301

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: We describe a novel pre-liver-transplant (LT) approach in colorectal liver metastasis (CRLM) allowing for improved monitoring of tumor biology and reduction of disease burden before committing a patient to transplantation. METHODS: Patients undergoing LT for CRLM at Cleveland Clinic were included. The described protocol involves intensive locoregional therapy with systemic chemotherapy, aiming to reach minimal disease burden revealed by PET scan and CEA. Patients with no detectable disease or irreversible treatment-induced liver injury undergo transplant. RESULTS: Nine patients received liver transplant out of 27 who were evaluated (33.3%). Median follow-up was 700 days. Seven patients (77.8%) received a living donor LT. Five had no detectable disease and four had treatment-induced cirrhosis. Pre-transplant management included chemotherapy (n=9) +/- Bevacizumab (n=6) and/or Anti-EGFR (n=6). Median pre-LT cycles of chemotherapy=16 (Range 10-40). Liver-directed therapy included Yttrium-90 (n=5), ablation (n=4), resection (n=4), and HAI-pump (n=3). Three patients recurred after LT. Actuarial 1- and 2-year recurrence-free survival were 75% (n=6/8) and 60% (n=3/5). Recurrence occurred in the lungs (n=1), liver graft (n=1), and lungs+paraaortic nodes (n=1). Patients with pre-LT detectable disease had reduced RFS (p=0.04). All patients with recurrence had histologically-viable tumor in the liver explant. Patients treated in our protocol (n=16) demonstrated improved survival versus those who were not candidates (n=11) regardless of transplant status (p=0.01). CONCLUSION: A protocol defined by aggressive pre-transplant liver-directed treatment and transplant for patients with undetectable disease or treatment-induced liver injury may help prevent tumor recurrence.

2.
Ann Surg ; 2024 Apr 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38557793

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Assess cost and complication outcomes after liver transplantation (LT) using normothermic machine perfusion (NMP). SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: End-ischemic NMP is often used to aid logistics, yet its' impact on outcomes after LT remains unclear, as does its' true impact on costs associated with transplantation. METHODS: Deceased donor liver recipients at two centers (1/1/2019-6/30/2023) were included. Retransplants, splits and combined grafts were excluded. End-ischemic NMP (OrganOx-Metra®) was implemented 10/2022 for extended-criteria DBDs, all DCDs and logistics. NMP-cases were matched 1:2 with cold storage controls (SCS) using the Balance-of-Risk (DBD-grafts) and UK-DCD Score (DCD-grafts). RESULTS: Overall, 803 transplantations were included, 174 (21.7%) receiving NMP. Matching was achieved between 118 NMP-DBDs with 236 SCS; and 37 NMP-DCD with 74 corresponding SCS. For both graft types, median inpatient comprehensive complications index (CCI) values were comparable between groups. DCD-NMP grafts experienced reduced cumulative 90-day CCI (27.6 vs. 41.9, P=0.028). NMP also reduced the need for early relaparotomy and renal-replacement-therapy, with subsequently less-frequent major complications (Clavien-Dindo >IVa). This effect was more pronounced in DCD-transplants. NMP had no protective effect on early biliary complications. Organ acquisition/preservation costs were higher with NMP, yet NMP-treated grafts had lower 90-day pre-transplant costs in context of shorter waiting-list times. Overall costs were comparable for both cohorts. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first risk-adjusted outcome and cost analysis comparing NMP and SCS. In addition to logistical benefits, NMP was associated with a reduction in relaparotomy and bleeding in DBD-grafts, and overall complications and post-LT renal-replacement for DCDs. While organ acquisition/preservation was more costly with NMP, overall 90-day-healthcare costs-per-transplantation were comparable.

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