•Renoportal anastomosis is an effective technique in cases of complex portal vein thrombosis with the presence of a splenorenal shunt.•Despite long-term patient and graft survival within accepted ...limits after liver transplant, renoportal anastomosis is a challenging technique not exempt from complications.
Renoportal anastomosis (RPA) is an effective technique in cases of complex portal vein thrombosis with the presence of a splenorenal shunt. The objective of this report is to describe the possible complications related to RPA.
A 50-year-old man with alcohol-related and hepatitis C-related cirrhosis and 2 hepatocellular carcinomas underwent liver transplant. He presented a portal vein thrombosis Yerdel IV, a splenorenal shunt, and another shunt between the inferior mesenteric vein (IMV) and the perirectal plexus. During surgery, the flow of the left renal vein was 891 mL/min, and this rose to 1050 mL/min after IMV clamping. RPA was made through iliac vein graft interposition, and the IMV was ligated. Portal flow was 832 mL/min but drastically decreased because of mesenteric root compression. After finishing the liver transplant, a renoiliac graft percutaneous transhepatic stent was put in place. The patient presented graft dysfunction and acute kidney injury. On postoperative day +18, a second stent was put in place because of a thrombosis in the splenomesenteric confluence. The patient subsequently presented partial distal rethrombosis and a pancreaticoduodenal arteriovenous fistula, which required several embolizations. The patient developed ascites, recurrent gastrointestinal bleeding, and persistent bacterial peritonitis. Finally, a modified Sugiura procedure (without splenectomy) was performed, achieving a portal flow of 1800 mL/min. However, the patient developed sepsis and multiorgan failure, and died on postoperative day +70.
Despite long-term patient and graft survival within accepted limits after LT, RPA is a challenging technique not exempt from complications.
Management of nonsplenorenal spontaneous portosystemic shunts (NSRSPSS) in liver transplant (LT) is controversial. Reports on the influence of its ligation suggest improvements in morbidity and ...survival.
Retrospective study of a single-center series. The objective was to analyze the outcomes and post-LT survival after the closure of NSRSPSS.
Between January 2005 and April 2021 a total of 23 patients with NSRSPSS underwent LT. The shunt was superior mesenteric vein–vena cava in 12 (52.2%), inferior mesenteric vein–vena cava in 6 (26.1%), through the left gastric vein in 4 (17.4%), and portocava in 1 (4.3%). Seven patients presented portal vein thrombosis, with thrombectomy being performed in 5. Moreover, 21 patients had portoportal anastomosis, 1 patient required portal reconstruction at the splenomesenteric confluence, and 1 had a coronary-portal anastomosis. The NSRSPSS was closed in 22 cases (95.7%). The mean (SD) portal flow before and after the closure of NSRSPSS was 1395 (572) mL/min and 1773 (583) mL/min (104.4 47.9 mL/min/100 g and 127.9 4.9 mL/min/100 g, respectively). Six patients (26.1%) presented primary graft dysfunction, 13 (56.5%) acute kidney injury, and 9 (39%) ascites. Three arterial stenoses (13%), 2 biliary stenoses (8.6%), and 1 intrahepatic portal thrombosis (4.3%) occurred. Median intensive care unit and hospital stay was 5 days (range, 3-8 days) and 15 days (range, 13-21 days). After a mean follow-up of 5.18 (3.2) years, all patients except 1 are alive.
The closure of the NSRSPSS during LT can optimize portal flow, with potential influence in morbidity and survival rates.
Abstract
Background and aim.
Hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) is the main predictor of clinical decompensation in cirrhotic patients with compensated disease of any etiology without varices. ...However, the predictive factors of decompensation are not so well known in patients with hepatitis C-related compensated cirrhosis, in whom etiology-based therapy is difficult. The aim of this study was to identify predictors of decompensation in patients with compensated chronic hepatitis C (CHC)-related cirrhosis with and without esophageal varices (Baveno stages 1 and 2).
Methods.
The study population was a cohort of 145 of such consecutive patients who received hepatic hemodynamic study. All patients were similarly followed every 6 months. Through multivariate Cox regression and bootstrap analyses, a prognostic index (PI) was developed and tested in an external cohort (n = 38).
Results.
Forty-two patients (29%) suffered a first decompensation episode after a median follow-up of 27 months (2-110). Cox regression analysis identified HVPG (hazard ratio (HR) 1.11; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.05-1.17) and albumin (HR 0.42; 95% CI: 0.22-0.82) as independent predictors of decompensation. Bootstrapping confirmed that HVPG (95% CI: 1.05-1.18) and albumin (95% CI: 0.12-0.74) were the most robust predictive variables. Using a cut-off level of 2.5, the PI 4 + (0.11 × HVPG - 0.8 × albumin) was able to distinguish two populations of patients with very different risks of decompensation in both the exploratory and validation cohorts. A time-dependent ROC curve identified HVPG as the best predictive variable.
Conclusion.
HVPG and albumin are independent predictors of clinical decompensation in patients with compensated CHC-related cirrhosis irrespective of the existence of varices.
Aims and objectives
To report an analysis of the concept of Living with chronic illness in adults, using Rodger's evolutionary analytical methodology.
Background
In the literature, several ...qualitative studies exist that address the question of Living with chronic illness from the adult patient's perspective. However, the lack of clarity and consensus among the existing studies renders this concept ambiguous when it is analysed in depth.
Design
A narrative review.
Methods
A systematic search has been carried out on electronic databases such as Medline (PubMed), Cinahl (Ebsco), Cochrane Library, PsycINFO (Ovid), Embase, Cuiden, Dialnet and Scielo. This was limited to articles published in either Spanish or English, from 2003–2013.
Results
Living with chronic illness is a complex, dynamic, cyclic and multidimensional process, and involves the development of five different attributes: Acceptance, Coping, Self‐management, Integration and Adjustment. Depending on how these attributes operate, there are four different ways of living which can result from the process of Living with chronic illness: (1) Disavowal, (2) False Normality, (3) The New Normal and (4) Disruption.
Conclusions
This paper contributes to the understanding of the concept ‘Living with chronic illness’. Findings in this analysis have to be evaluated with caution and further research is needed on this topic to confirm them. Also, more studies in evaluating how patients live a long‐term condition are recommended to foster patient‐centred care.
Relevance to clinical practice
Findings generated from this concept analysis can raise awareness of Living with chronic illness so that this process could be assessed in a correct and uniform way in the clinical community and improved when needed.
The appropriate selection of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients who are eligible for transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) remains a challenge. The ART score has recently been proposed as a ...method of identifying patients who are eligible or not for a second TACE procedure.
To assess the validity of the Assessment for Retreatment with TACE (ART) score in a cohort of patients treated with drug-eluting bead TACE (DEB-TACE).
to identify clinical determinants associated with overall survival (OS).
A retrospective, multicentre study conducted in Spain in patients with HCC having undergone two or more DEB-TACE procedures between January 2009 and December 2014. The clinical characteristics and OS from the day before the second DEB-TACE of patients with a high ART score (ART≥2.5) and a low ART score (ART 0-1) were compared. Risk factors for mortality were identified using Cox's proportional hazards model.
Of the 102 patients included, 51 scored 0-1.5 and 51 scored ≥2.5. Hepatitis C was more frequent in patients scoring ≥2.5. Median OS from the day before the second DEB-TACE was 21 months (95% CI, 15-28) in the group scoring 0-1.5, and 17 months (95% CI, 10-25) in the group scoring ≥2.5 (P=0.3562). Platelet count and tumour size, but not the ART score, were independent baseline predictors of OS.
The ART score is not suitable for guiding DEB-TACE retreatment according to Spanish clinical practice standards.
Recent studies have shown that liver cirrhosis (LC) behaves as an acquired hypercoagulable state with increased thrombotic risk. This is why anticoagulation therapy (AT) is now frequently used in ...these patients. Variceal bleeding is a severe complication of LC. It is unknown whether AT may impact the outcome of bleeding in these patients. Fifty‐two patients on AT with upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) were evaluated. Portal vein thrombosis (PVT) and different cardiovascular disorders (CVDs) were the indication for AT in 14 and 38 patients, respectively. Overall, 104 patients with LC and UGIB not under AT matched for severity of LC, age, sex, source of bleeding, and Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score served as controls. UGIB was attributed to portal hypertension (PH) in 99 (63%) patients and peptic/vascular lesions in 57 (37%). Twenty‐six (17%) patients experienced 5‐day failure; SOFA, source of UGIB, and PVT, but not AT, were independent predictors of 5‐day failure. In addition, independent predictors of 6‐week mortality, which was observed in 26 (11%) patients, were SOFA, Charlson Comorbidity index, and use of AT for a CVD. There were no differences between patients with/without AT in needs for rescue therapies, intensive care unit admission, transfusions, and hospital stay. Conclusions: Factors that impact the outcome of UGIB in patients under AT are degree of multiorgan failure and comorbidity, but not AT itself. (Hepatology 2015;62:575–583
Although good results have been reported with the use of normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) in controlled donation after circulatory death (cDCD) liver transplantation (LT), there is a lack of ...evidence to demonstrate similar results to donation after brain death (DBD). We present a single‐center retrospective case‐matched (1:2) study including 100 NRP cDCD LTs and 200 DBD LTs and a median follow‐up of 36 months. Matching was done according to donor age, recipient Model for End‐Stage Liver Disease score, and cold ischemia time. The following perioperative results were similar in both groups: alanine transaminase peaks of 909 U/L in the DBD group and 836 U/L in the cDCD group and early allograft disfunction percentages of 21% and 19.2%, respectively. The 1‐year and 3‐year overall graft survival for cDCD was 99% and 93%, respectively, versus 92% and 87%, respectively, for DBD (P = 0.04). Of note, no cases of primary nonfunction or ischemic‐type biliary lesion were observed among the cDCD grafts. Our results confirm that NRP cDCD LT meets the same outcomes as those obtained with DBD LT and provides evidence to support the idea that cDCD donors per se should no longer be considered as “marginal donors” when recovered with NRP.