| Trasplante Hepático |
Bibliografía |
Treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma associated with cirrhosis in the era of
liver transplantation.
Ann Intern Med 1998 Oct 15;129(8):643-53
Mor E, Kaspa RT, Sheiner P, Schwartz M
Rabin Medical Center, Petah-Tikva, Israel. eytanmor@mail.netvision.net.il
PURPOSE: To review the treatment of cirrhotic patients with hepatocellular carcinoma in the era of liver transplantation and to determine the most appropriate approach to the treatment of patients at different stages of disease. DATA SOURCES: A MEDLINE search of English-language articles published between 1981 and 1997 and the clinical experience of the Mount Sinai Liver Transplant Program. STUDY SELECTION: Selected studies were 1) original articles reporting results of resection and transplantation in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhotic patients and 2) initial reports from major transplantation centers of multimethod therapies combining chemotherapy with transplantation. DATA EXTRACTION: Study designs were assessed with careful attention to methods and aims. Relevant data on patient population, tumor stage distribution, treatment, survival, and rate of recurrent disease were extracted and analyzed. DATA SYNTHESIS: Options for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhotic patients vary according to tumor stage and severity of underlying liver disease. Resection remains an important method primarily in eastern countries, where the screening of high-risk populations has been associated with early detection of small asymptomatic lesions. Long-term survival after resection, however, is low. In western countries, liver transplantation is becoming the treatment of choice in patients with advanced cirrhosis and small, unresectable lesions; resection is reserved for cirrhotic patients with small, peripheral lesions and preserved hepatic function. Minimally invasive procedures (such as percutaneous ethanol injection and transarterial chemoembolization) have been developed to treat unresectable tumors. Transarterial chemoembolization may also be effective in patients with advanced cirrhosis and unresectable lesions who are awaiting transplantation. CONCLUSIONS: The efficacy of liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma has been proven mainly in patients with advanced cirrhosis and small lesions. Future studies may clarify the role of approaches combining neoadjuvant chemotherapy with transplantation for large (stage III) tumors.
Patterns of alcohol consumption after liver transplantation.
Gut 1998 Jul;43(1):140-5
Tang H, Boulton R, Gunson B, Hubscher S, Neuberger J
Liver Unit, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, UK.
BACKGROUND: Uncertainty exists about the extent and consequences of a return to alcohol consumption after liver transplantation for alcoholic liver disease (ALD). AIMS: To determine the prevalence and consequences of alcohol consumption in patients transplanted for ALD. METHODS: A retrospective case controlled study of all patients transplanted for ALD at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, between 1987 and 1996. RESULTS: Seventy patients with ALD were transplanted, of which 59 survived more than three months; 56 were interviewed. Twenty eight had consumed some alcohol after transplantation; for the nine "heavy drinkers" (HD), the median time to resumption of alcohol intake was six months and for the 19 "moderate drinkers" (MD) it was eight months. There was no significant difference in episodes of acute rejection or compliance with medication between those who were abstinent, MD, or HD. Histological evidence of liver injury was common in ALD patients who had returned to drink. Mild fatty change was found in 1/11 biopsy specimens from abstinent patients but moderate to severe fatty change and ballooned hepatocytes were seen in 3/5 MD and 2/5 HD specimens. Two HD patients had early fibrosis. One HD patient had died of alcohol related complications. CONCLUSIONS: Moderate to heavy alcohol consumption occurs in patients transplanted for ALD. Patient recall of abstinence advice is unreliable, and patients return to alcohol mainly within the first year after liver transplantation. Return to alcohol consumption after liver transplantation is associated with rapid development of histological liver injury including fibrosis.
Cystic fibrosis: present and future.
Digestion 1998 Aug;59(5):579-88
Milla PJ
Great ormond Street Hospital for Children, and Institute for Child Health, London, UK. P.Milla@ich.ucl.ac.uk
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is an inherited disorder of epithelial chloride transport affecting primarily pancreas, lungs, gut, liver and exocrine glands. The defect is caused by defects of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulation gene on chromosome 7. Genotyping has proved useful in identifying gene carriers, a definitive diagnosis, and in antenetal diagnosis. Genotype/phenotype relationships have shown that the commonest cause of pancreatic insufficiency is the D F508 mutation. Clinical trials are exploring the use of somatic gene therapy but this is not yet a viable treatment option. Liver, lung and intestinal disease result in malnutrition which causes further dysfunction of these organs. Aggressive nutritional and pancreatic enzyme therapy results in improved disease, normal growth and increased survival. However, high-dose enzyme therapy may in some individuals cause a fibrosing colonopathy. For those with end-stage liver and lung disease, transplantation holds out some hope.
Outcomes from nonemergent orthotopic liver transplantation: is postoperative
care becoming routine?
Am Surg 1998 Oct;64(10):926-9
Chen SC, Cunneen SA, Colquhoun SD, Shabot MM
Burns and Allen Research Institute, Department of Surgery, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, and the UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 90048, USA.
The outcome of surgical intensive care unit (SICU) care after nonemergent orthotopic liver transplantation (OLTX) was evaluated in 168 consecutive patients over a 6-year period (1/90-12/95). Prospective data collected included age, first and last SICU day Simplified Acute Physiology Score and Quantitative Therapeutic Intervention System Score, SICU length of stay (LOS), and mortality. The patient population was 61 per cent male and 39 per cent female, with ages ranging from 20 to 75 years. A total of four patients died in the SICU, for a mortality of 2.4 per cent. Over the study period, SICU LOS decreased by 21 per cent, from 3.9 +/- 0.7 to 3.1 +/- 0.3 days (P < 0.05). Although no difference in admission severity of illness was observed over the study period, there was an increase in the intensity of intervention performed on admission to the SICU. Over the study period, there was no difference in severity of illness or intensity of intervention upon discharge to floor care. The decreased SICU LOS did not adversely affect patient mortality or severity of illness upon SICU discharge during the 6-year period. With intensified SICU intervention, nonemergent orthotopic liver transplantation patients can have a shorter SICU LOS without adverse effects on outcome.
Cerebral 1H MR spectroscopy and neuropsychologic status of patients with
hepatic encephalopathy.
AJR Am J Roentgenol 1998 Oct;171(4):1123-30
Thomas MA, Huda A, Guze B, Curran J, Bugbee M, Fairbanks L, Ke Y, Oshiro T, Martin P,
Fawzy F
Department of Radiological Sciences, UCLA School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles 90095, USA.
OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to assess the metabolite levels (myo-inositol [ml], choline [Cho], creatine [Cr], glutamate or glutamine [Glx], and N-acetyl-L-aspartate [NAA]) visible on 1H MR spectroscopy in patients with subclinical and mild hepatic encephalopathy before and after liver transplantation and to correlate these data with the results of neuropsychiatric tests and related clinical findings. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A stimulated-echo sequence was used to localize a single voxel in the parietal region. Seventeen patients and 13 healthy volunteers were investigated. Nine of the 17 patients also were investigated after liver transplantation. A battery of neuropsychologic tests also was administered to patients to assess frontal, memory, and motor functions. RESULTS: Before liver transplantation, significant reductions in mI:Cr (51%) and Cho:Cr (11%) and a significant increase in Glx:Cr (20%) were observed in patients compared with the respective ratios in healthy subjects. Patients also were significantly impaired on neuropsychologic tests measuring frontal and motor performance, but not memory. Impairment on the frontal index showed a significant correlation with mI:Cr levels; likewise, performance on the motor index showed a significant correlation with serum ammonia levels before transplantation. MR spectroscopy after liver transplantation showed changes in the metabolite ratios compared with the pretransplantation status. Even though the Glx:Cr ratios decreased after transplantation, the mI:Cr ratio remained lower than those of healthy subjects. CONCLUSION: The relationship of changes in the metabolite ratios recorded from a voxel in the posteromedial parietal lobe to the neuropsychologic findings before and after liver transplantation is a major finding.
[Adult idiopathic ductopenia. 1 case].
Gastroenterol Clin Biol 1998 Feb;22(2):227-31
(Artículo en frances)
Brazier F, Duchmann JC, Sevestre H, Capron D, Capron JP
Service d'Hepato-Gastroenterologie, CHU Nord, Amiens.
Idiopathic adult ductopenia is very rare. We report one case in a 30-year-old man, whose clinical course was characterized by jaundice and pruritus. Laboratory investigations revealed cholestasis and polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia. Serum antinuclear, antimitochondrial, and anti-smooth muscle antibodies and serological markers for viral hepatitis were negative. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography showed no liver or biliary tract abnormalities. Histological examination of a liver specimen showed a vanishing bile duct syndrome and moderate portal infiltration with lympho-histiocytic cells; there were no granulomas. Liver transplantation was performed due to rapid development of cirrhosis. The differential diagnosis of idiopathic adult ductopenia with small duct primary sclerosing cholangitis, auto-immune cholangiopathy, and non syndromic paucity of intrahepatic bile ducts is unclear.
Cyclosporin whole blood immunoassays (AxSYM, CEDIA, and Emit): a critical
overview of performance characteristics and comparison with HPLC.
Clin Chem 1998 Oct;44(10):2158-64
Schutz E, Svinarov D, Shipkova M, Niedmann PD, Armstrong VW, Wieland E, Oellerich M
Abteilung Klinische Chemie, Georg-August-Universitat Gottingen, Germany. eschuetz@med.uni-goettingen.de
Assays with different specificity are used for cyclosporin monitoring in clinical transplantation. A recent survey of 35 centers showed that 86% used immunoassays for cyclosporin A (CsA). In consensus documents the following performance criteria were recommended: (a) imprecision < or = 10% at 50 microg/L and < or = 5% at 300 microg/L; and (b) comparison with the reference method (HPLC) should yield a slope of 0.9-1.1, an intercept of -15 to 15 microg/L, and S(y/x) < or = 15 microg/L. The newly developed CsA assays for the AxSYM (Abbott) and the CEDIA (Boehringer Mannheim) as well as the Emit assay (Behring Diagnostica) were evaluated. Results from samples of heart, kidney, and liver recipients (100 specimens each) were compared with a validated HPLC-ultraviolet detection method. Between-series imprecision (CV) with commercial controls was 5.8% and 1.7% for AxSYM (70 and 300 microg/L), 11% and 5.5% for CEDIA (90 and 200 microg/L), and 8.1% and 4.5% for Emit (63 and 172 microg/L). In the presence of 300 microg/L parent CsA, cross-reactivities were (for AxSYM, CEDIA, and Emit, respectively) 7%, 4%, and none for AM1 (1 mg/L) and 12.6%, 25%, and 6% for AM9 (0.5 mg/L). Comparison with HPLC showed in heart and kidney recipients an average overestimation with the Emit and the CEDIA of approximately 22%, with overestimation in the AxSYM of 32%. In liver recipients, the most challenging patient group, the CEDIA and the AxSYM showed a mean overestimation of 43% and 47%, respectively, and the Emit differed by 31% compared with HPLC. None of the immunoassays fully satisfied the performance criteria recommended in the consensus documents. In terms of specificity, Emit ranks before CEDIA, which ranks before AxSYM. Regarding imprecision, the ranking is AxSYM < Emit < CEDIA. These limitations must be considered when using these assays for therapeutic drug monitoring of CsA in clinical transplantation.
Detection of hepatitis C virus replication in peripheral blood mononuclear
cells after orthotopic liver transplantation.
Transplantation 1998 Sep 15;66(5):664-6
Radkowski M, Wang LF, Vargas HE, Rakela J, Laskus T
Division of Transplant Medicine, Thomas E. Starzl Transplantation Institute, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA.
BACKGROUND: The presence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) replication in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) remains controversial. We determined the presence of the negative HCV RNA strand in PBMCs from a group of HCV-positive patients before and after liver transplantation. METHODS: Nine patients receiving orthotopic liver transplantation for end-stage HCV-related liver disease were studied. PBMCs were collected on the day of transplantation and 1 month later. The negative HCV RNA strand was detected by highly strand-specific Tth-based reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS: All nine patients were positive for the presence of the HCV RNA-positive strand in serum and PBMCs both before and after transplantation. The presence of the negative HCV RNA strand was documented in three PBMC samples after transplantation but in none of the samples collected before transplantation. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that under circumstances of impaired immunity associated with pharmacological immunosuppression, HCV may be lymphotropic in vivo.
Concomitant caudate lobe resection as an option for donor hepatectomy in adult
living related liver transplantation.
Transplantation 1998 Sep 15;66(5):661-3
Miyagawa S, Hashikura Y, Miwa S, Ikegami T, Urata K, Terada M, Kubota T, Nakata T,
Kawasaki S
First Department of Surgery, Shinshu University, School of Medicine, Matsumoto, Japan. smiyagawa@surg101.shinshu-u.ac.jp
In this article, we describe a successful adult living related partial liver transplantation (LRLT) using the left lobe with the left-side caudate lobe (the Spiegel lobe and the left side of the paracaval portion). The size of the donor's left lobe was 29% of the recipient's standard liver volume and did not seem to meet our criteria for adult-to-adult LRLT. However, the donor had a thick left-side caudate lobe. The estimated volume of the left lobe with the left-side caudate lobe was 32%, which met our criteria for the adult recipient. The recipient's CT scan on day 87 after transplantation showed the preserved blood flow and no biliary congestion in the left-side caudate lobe, which suggests maintenance of lobe function. This procedure may be an option for adult-to-adult LRLT in which the donor has a thick left-side caudate lobe.