Long-term medical complications and quality of life in adult recipients surviving 10 years or more after liver transplantation.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_CBCE50BA550B
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Long-term medical complications and quality of life in adult recipients surviving 10 years or more after liver transplantation.
Journal
Acta Gastro-enterologica Belgica
Author(s)
Ciccarelli O., Kaczmarek B., Roggen F., DeReyck C., Goffette P., Danse E., Verbaandert C., Sempoux C., Wittebole X., Wallemacq P., Lerut J.
ISSN
1784-3227 (Print)
ISSN-L
1784-3227
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2005
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
68
Number
3
Pages
323-330
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Comparative Study ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tPublication Status: ppublish
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND STUDY AIMS: Little information is available about long-term results after adult liver transplantation. This study analyses long-term medical complications, changes of immunosuppression, recurrence of primary disease and quality of life 10 years after liver transplantation.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: During the period February 1984-April 1994, 324 LT were performed in 282 adults (>15 years). One hundred forty-seven (52%) patients survived more than 10 years. Data regarding health status of 103 patients exclusively followed-up in our institution were analyzed.
RESULTS: Actual 1, 5, 10 years survival rates of the 282 recipients were 76.6%, 64.9% and 52% respectively. Forty eight (46.6%) of the 103 studied patients had normal liver tests in their tenth year of the follow-up. Seventy-one (69%) patients were on a CyA, TAC or MMF monotherapy; 31 (30%) patients had CyA levels of less than 100ng/ml. Forty five patients had recurrent allograft disease. Twenty-four (40.6%) of 59 liver biopsy available at 10th year were normal. Thirty five (34%) patients developed chronic renal failure; nine (8.7%) of them had end-stage renal disease. New onset hypertension (>140/100 mmHg) developed in 49 (47.6%) patients; fourteen (13.6%) developed diabetes (glucose blood level > 140 mg/dl) and twenty five (24.2%) patients had serious cardiovascular events. Thirteen (12.6%) patients had a BMI>28 and thirty six (35%) patients had elevated serum cholesterol (>220 mg/dl). Cataract was present in 8 (7.7%) patients. De novo malignancy developed in 23 (22.3%) patients. One patient each developed nasopharyngeal lymphoproliferative disease and myeloma. Quality of life of this patient cohort was excellent as shown by a Karnofsky score of more than 80% in 96.6% of patients.
CONCLUSION: The high rate of medical complications and especially of malignant tumours in this long-term follow-up study indicate that further optimization and especially minimization of immunosuppressive therapy as well as development of newer therapies in order to prevent recurrent allograft diseases are the priority for the future development of transplant medicine.
Keywords
Adult, Biopsy, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Graft Rejection/prevention & control, Graft Survival, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents/therapeutic use, Liver Transplantation/mortality, Liver Transplantation/pathology, Male, Postoperative Complications/mortality, Postoperative Complications/pathology, Quality of Life, Recurrence, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate/trends, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
20/10/2016 17:15
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:46
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