Adult-to-adult living donor liver transplantation using extended right lobe grafts.

OBJECTIVE The authors report their experience with living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) using extended right lobe grafts for adult patients under high-urgency situations. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA The efficacy of LDLT in the treatment of children has been established. The major limitation of adult-to-adult LDLT is the adequacy of the graft size. A left lobe graft from a relatively small volunteer donor will not meet the metabolic demand of a larger recipient. METHODS From May 1996 to November 1996, seven LDLTs, using extended right lobe grafts, were performed under high-urgency situations. All recipients were in intensive care units before transplantation with five having acute renal failure, three on mechanical ventilation, and all with hepatic encephalopathy. The median body weight for the donors and recipients was 58 kg (range, 41-84 kg) and 65 kg (range, 53-90 kg), respectively. The body weights of four donors were less than those of the corresponding recipients, and the lowest donor-to-recipient body weight ratio was 0.62:1. The extended right lobe graft was chosen because the left lobe volume was <40% of the ideal liver mass of the recipient. RESULTS Median blood loss for the donors was 900 mL (range, 700-1600 mL) and hospital stay was 19 days (range, 8-22 days). Homologous blood transfusion was not required. Two donors had complications (one incisional hernia and one bile duct stricture) requiring reoperation after discharge. All were well with normal liver function 5 to 10 months after surgery. The graft weight ranged from 490 g to 1140 g. All grafts showed immediate function with normalization of prothrombin time and recovery of conscious state of the recipients. There was no vascular complication, but six recipients required reoperation. One recipient died of systemic candidiasis 16 days after transplantation and 6 (86%) were alive with the original graft at a median follow-up of 6.5 months (range, 5-10 months). CONCLUSIONS When performed by a team with experience in hepatectomy and transplantation, LDLT, using an extended right lobe graft, can achieve superior results. The technique extends the success of LDLT from pediatric recipients to adult recipients and opens a new donor pool for adults to receive a timely graft of adequate function.

[1]  K. Tanaka,et al.  Living-related liver transplantation in adult recipients: a hypothesis. , 1995, Clinical transplantation.

[2]  S. Fan,et al.  Minimum graft volume for successful adult-to-adult living donor liver transplantation for fulminant hepatic failure. , 1996, Transplantation.

[3]  A. Tanaka,et al.  Liver transplantation using a right lobe graft from a living related donor. , 1994, Transplantation.

[4]  J. Emond,et al.  Reduced‐size orthotopic liver transplantation: Use in the management of children with chronic liver disease , 1989, Hepatology.

[5]  S. Kawasaki,et al.  Living Related-Donor Liver Transplantation from Adult to Adult for Primary Biliary Cirrhosis , 1995, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[6]  F. Deland,et al.  Relationship between liver size and body size. , 1968, Radiology.

[7]  J. Emond,et al.  Improved results of living-related liver transplantation with routine application in a pediatric program. , 1993, Transplantation.

[8]  S. Fan,et al.  Technique of hepatectomy , 1996, The British journal of surgery.

[9]  K. Boudjema,et al.  Auxiary Liver Transplantation For Fulminant And Subfulminant Hepatic Failure , 1995, Transplantation.

[10]  Y. Yamaoka,et al.  Timing of transplantation and donor selection in living related liver transplantation for fulminant Wilson's disease. , 1995, Transplantation proceedings.

[11]  J. Thompson,et al.  Fulminant hepatic failure and liver transplantation. , 1992, Transplantation proceedings.

[12]  S. Fan,et al.  Anterior Approach for Difficult Major Right Hepatectomy , 1996, World Journal of Surgery.

[13]  P. Singer,et al.  Ethics of liver transplantation with living donors. , 1989, The New England journal of medicine.

[14]  A. Tanaka,et al.  Safety Of The Donor In Living‐Related Liver Transplantation‐An Analysis Of 100 Parental Donors , 1995, Transplantation.

[15]  J. Emond,et al.  Liver transplantation for fulminant hepatic failure. , 1993, Archives of surgery.

[16]  J R Lake,et al.  Functional analysis of grafts from living donors. Implications for the treatment of older recipients. , 1996, Annals of surgery.

[17]  S. Kawasaki,et al.  Living-related liver transplantation in fulminant hepatic failure , 1992, The Lancet.

[18]  W. Knoefel,et al.  In situ splitting of cadaveric livers. The ultimate expansion of a limited donor pool. , 1996, Annals of surgery.

[19]  J. Emond,et al.  Liver transplantation in children from living related donors. Surgical techniques and results. , 1991, Annals of surgery.

[20]  S. Fan,et al.  Living unrelated liver transplantation between spouses for fulminant hepatic failure , 1995, The British journal of surgery.

[21]  J. Emond,et al.  Liver transplantation in the management of fulminant hepatic failure. , 1989, Gastroenterology.

[22]  D. Samuel,et al.  Auxiliary partial orthotopic liver transplantation for fulminant hepatitis. The Paul Brousse experience. , 1996, Annals of surgery.

[23]  D. Samuel,et al.  Orthotopic Liver Transplantation in Fulminant and Subfulminant Hepatitis The Paul Brousse Experience , 1995, Annals of surgery.

[24]  E. Sokal,et al.  Size reduction of the donor liver is a safe way to alleviate the shortage of size-matched organs in pediatric liver transplantation. , 1990, Annals of surgery.

[25]  J. Emond,et al.  Transplantation of Two Patients with One Liver: Analysis of a Preliminary Experience with 'Split‐liver' Grafting , 1990, Annals of surgery.

[26]  M. Malago',et al.  Living related liver transplantation: 36 cases at the University of Hamburg. , 1994, Transplantation proceedings.

[27]  Hong-Jin Kim,et al.  Surgical techniques and innovations in living related liver transplantation. , 1993, Annals of surgery.

[28]  H. Bismuth,et al.  Split-liver Transplantation: The Paul Brousse Policy , 1996 .