Safety of Donors With Fatty Liver in Liver Transplantation

C. H.D. Kwon, J. W. Joh, K. W. Lee, S. J. Kim, Y. S. Han, J. W. Park, D. J. Kim, J. B. Park, S. K. Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

Steatotic liver graft transplantation affect donor safety as well as recipient survival. We investigated safety of donors according to the extent of fatty change. We retrospectively reviewed donors who underwent right hepatectomy from September 1999 to April 2005, dividing them into three groups according to degree of macrovesicular fatty change upon intraoperative liver biopsy. Group 1 included patients with macrovesicular steatosis of 0 ∼ 9%: group 2, 10 ∼ 19% and group 3, at least 20%. Two hundred forty-five donors were enrolled with a male to female ratio of 2.02:1 and mean age of 31.8 years. There were 163 donors in group 1, 75 in group 2, and seven in group 3. There was no statistically significant difference in body mass index, operative time, blood loss, postoperative peak serum bilirubin, and aspartate transaminase levels among groups 1, 2, and 3. Overall complication rate, including reoperation, biliary stricture, wound infection, ileus, transfusion, bile leak and fluid collection were not different between the groups. Postoperative hospital stay was also not different. Peak alanine transaminase level was different between each group, and prothrombin time between group 1 and 3, but days until return to normal levels in all measured laboratory parameters were not different. Residual liver volume percent was significantly smaller among group 1 compared to others. In conclusion, fatty livers with less than 30% macrovesicular steatosis may be good donor candidates without significant complications as long as sufficient residual liver volume is left for the donor.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2106-2107
Number of pages2
JournalTransplantation Proceedings
Volume38
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2006
Externally publishedYes

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