Full-right-full-left split liver transplantation divides a donor liver into two grafts to be transplanted in adult-size patients. Major technical and organizational difficulties have limited its application to few single center series. We retrospectively analyzed the long-term results of the first multicenter series of this procedure with graft sharing. Between November 1998 and January 2005, 43 transplants were performed by five centers from 23 full-right-full-left in situ split liver procedures; 65% of the grafts were shared. A total of 31 (72%) patients had complications above grade II; 3 (6.9%) were retransplanted. Hospital mortality was 23% with sepsis as the main cause. Six patients died in the long term, two of them for a road accident. A total of 27 patients are alive after a median follow-up of 3200 days (2035-4256). Actuarial survival at 1 and 10 years were 72.1%, 62.6% and 65.1%, 57.9%, respectively for patients and grafts. These figures are similar to those reported for adult living donor liver transplantation by the European Registry over a similar period. Multicenter collaboration in sharing of these grafts is feasible and can help facing the organizational limits, thus increasing diffusion of full-right-full-left split liver transplantation.

Full-Right-Full-Left Split Liver Transplantation : The Retrospective Analysis of an Early Multicenter Experience Including Graft Sharing / M. Zambelli, E. Andorno, L. De Carlis, G. Rossi, U. Cillo, T. De Feo, A. Carobbio, A. Giacomoni, G. Bottino, M. Colledan. - In: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION. - ISSN 1600-6135. - 12:8(2012 Aug), pp. 2198-2210. [10.1111/j.1600-6143.2012.04071.x]

Full-Right-Full-Left Split Liver Transplantation : The Retrospective Analysis of an Early Multicenter Experience Including Graft Sharing

G. Rossi;
2012

Abstract

Full-right-full-left split liver transplantation divides a donor liver into two grafts to be transplanted in adult-size patients. Major technical and organizational difficulties have limited its application to few single center series. We retrospectively analyzed the long-term results of the first multicenter series of this procedure with graft sharing. Between November 1998 and January 2005, 43 transplants were performed by five centers from 23 full-right-full-left in situ split liver procedures; 65% of the grafts were shared. A total of 31 (72%) patients had complications above grade II; 3 (6.9%) were retransplanted. Hospital mortality was 23% with sepsis as the main cause. Six patients died in the long term, two of them for a road accident. A total of 27 patients are alive after a median follow-up of 3200 days (2035-4256). Actuarial survival at 1 and 10 years were 72.1%, 62.6% and 65.1%, 57.9%, respectively for patients and grafts. These figures are similar to those reported for adult living donor liver transplantation by the European Registry over a similar period. Multicenter collaboration in sharing of these grafts is feasible and can help facing the organizational limits, thus increasing diffusion of full-right-full-left split liver transplantation.
adult to adult; Adults; full-right-full-left graft; graft sharing; partial graft; Split liver; splitting technique
Settore MED/18 - Chirurgia Generale
ago-2012
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/204556
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