| 26 Avril 2013
 For patients with end-stage liver disease, liver transplantation is  their only option to prolong life.  However, more than 16,000 Americans  are currently on the waiting list for a liver according to the Organ  Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN).  The critical shortage  of deceased donor organs has increased LDLT—a procedure that uses a  healthy portion of the liver from a living donor for transplant.   Although prior research shows that LDLT is an effective treatment, a  2007 study by de Villa et al. found that LDLT accounts for less than  five percent of liver transplants in the U.S. and Europe.   “Donors who decide to provide a portion of their liver to a loved one  in need are making an extremely difficult decision to save the life of  another,” explains lead author Dr. Elizabeth Pomfret, Professor of  Surgery at Tufts University and Chair of the Department of  Transplantation and Hepatobiliary Diseases at Lahey Hospital &  Medical Center in Burlington, Mass. “It is our responsibility as  transplant specialists to provide donors with comprehensive information  and education relating to LDLT, including any risks, so they may make  informed decisions about donation.”   To extend understanding of potential risks for liver lobe donors, the  team conducted a web-based survey of 148 transplant centers around the  world that perform LDLTs.  Center representatives were asked to provide  donor demographics; morbidity and mortality incidence; “near-miss” event  data, and number of aborted procedures.  Potentially life-threatening  “near-miss” events included severe intraoperative bleeding, reoperation  for bleeding, biliary reconstruction and pulmonary embolism.   A total of 71 centers (48%) responded to the survey, representing 21  countries, and performing 11,553 LDLTs procedures. Analysis shows that  donor morbidity was 24% including five donors who required liver  transplantation.  Donor mortality was 0.2% (23/11,553), with the  majority of deaths occurring within 60 days post-transplant and 19  deaths were a direct result of transplant surgery.  Researchers reported  that “near-miss” event and aborted surgery incidence was 1.1% and 1.2%,  respectively.   Dr. Pomfret concludes, “It appears that the 0.2% donor mortality rate  was consistent and independent of the center’s experience performing  LDLTs. However, increased experience—centers performing more than 50  total LDLTs—is associated with lower rates of aborted procedures and  “near-miss” events. These potentially life-threatening complications  must be discussed as part of the informed consent with any potential  liver donor.”   In a related editorial, Dr. Daniela Ladner, Assistant Professor of  Surgery at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in  Chicago, IL agrees, “Living liver donation is arguably the most invasive  operation we as surgeons perform in willing patients with no  demonstrable medical benefit, allowing them to donate a portion of their  liver to save the life of someone with end-stage liver disease.  As Dr.  Pomfret and colleagues suggest, transplant surgeons are obligated to  fully disclose all potential risk to donors.”  Dr. Ladner also suggests  that all complications as well as near-miss events that did not reach  the patient should be captured and systematically examined to identify  areas of improvement with LDLT procedures and reduce life-threatening  events for living donors.  A study published in Liver Transplantation,  a journal of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases  and the International Liver Transplantation Society, reports that donor  mortality is about 1 in 500 donors with living donor liver  transplantation (LDLT).  Research of transplant centers around the world  found that those with more experience conducting live donor procedures  had lower rates of aborted surgery and life-threatening “near-miss”  events.
A study published in Liver Transplantation,  a journal of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases  and the International Liver Transplantation Society, reports that donor  mortality is about 1 in 500 donors with living donor liver  transplantation (LDLT).  Research of transplant centers around the world  found that those with more experience conducting live donor procedures  had lower rates of aborted surgery and life-threatening “near-miss”  events. 









