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Classification and prognosis of intrahepatic biliary stricture after liver transplantation

Cited 62 time in Web of Science Cited 68 time in Scopus
Authors

Lee, Hae Won; Suh, Kyung-Suk; Shin, Woo Young; Cho, Eung-Ho; Yi, Nam-Joon; Lee, Jeong Min; Han, Joon Koo; Lee, Kuhn Uk

Issue Date
2007-11-30
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons
Citation
Liver Transpl. 2007 Dec;13(12):1736-42
Keywords
Bile Duct Diseases/*classification/etiology/mortality/radiography/surgeryBile Ducts, Intrahepatic/*pathology/radiographyCholangiographyConstriction, PathologicFollow-Up StudiesHumansIncidenceLiver Transplantation/*adverse effectsReoperationRetrospective StudiesTerminology as TopicTime FactorsTreatment OutcomeTissue Donors
Abstract
Intrahepatic biliary stricture (IHBS) after liver transplantation (LT) may develop in patients with hepatic artery thrombosis, chronic rejection, or ABO incompatibility, as well as in patients with prolonged warm ischemia in non-heart-beating donor (NHBD) LT. However, the clinical course and methods of management have not been well defined for IHBSs to date. Thus, the purpose of this study was to provide a classification of post-LT IHBS and to investigate patient prognosis. Forty-four patients who developed IHBS after NHBD LT were enrolled. On the basis of the cholangiographic appearance, patients were classified into 4 groups: unilateral focal (UF, n=8), confluence (CO, n=10), bilateral multifocal (BM, n=21), and diffuse necrosis (DN, n=5). The UF type was defined as cases with stricture only in the segmental branch of the unilateral hemiliver; the CO type in cases with several strictures at confluence level; and the BM type in cases with multiple strictures bilaterally. Cases with diffuse obliteration of peripheral ducts or destruction of the central architectural integrity, over a long segment, were classified as the DN type. Five patients with the CO type required several interventions requiring biliary dilatation, yet all patients with the UF or CO type had a good prognosis. Among the patients with the BM type, 3 patients (14.3%) died or underwent retransplantation due to biliary complications, and 7 (33.3%) required repeated interventions for >1 year without improvement. Moreover, among 5 patients classified as the DN type, 1 (20%) died of biliary sepsis, 2 (40%) underwent retransplantation, and the remaining 2 (40%) did not recover from persistent jaundice and life-threatening cholangitis despite multiple interventions. In conclusion, all patients classified as UF or CO had a good outcome with or without additional interventions. However, all patients with the DN type and about half the patients with the BM type did not recover from life-threatening complications, despite repeated aggressive interventions; early retransplantation was therefore the only treatment option for these patients.
ISSN
1527-6465 (Print)
Language
English
URI
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=18044761

https://hdl.handle.net/10371/11899
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/lt.21201
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