SMALL FOR SIZE IN LIVER SURGERY Ghent, 11 th March 2005 THE HEMIPORTOCAVAL SHUNT R. Troisi, MD PhD Hepatobiliary and Liver Transplantation Service Ghent.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Eisele RM, Schumacher G, Settmacher U, Neuhaus P
Advertisements

Operating on patient with Hepatitis C Sonal Asthana, MD and Norman Kneteman, MD Can J Surg August; 52(4): 337–342. Canadian Journal of Surgery The.
SRTR Transplant Benefit-Based Liver Allocation Robert M. Merion, MD, FACS OPTN/UNOS Liver Forum Atlanta, GA April 12, 2010.
A Clinical Evaluation of Terumo’s Prescriptive Oxygenation™ Series Capiox® FX15 and FX25 Hollow Fiber oxygenators with Integrated Arterial Filter in the.
John C. Lantis II, MD.  To what extent does proactive vascular access monitoring affect the incidence of AV access thrombosis and abandonment compared.
Basics of Organ Transplantation Lon Eskind, MD Director Liver Transplant, CMC Assoc. Medical Director of LifeShare.
Update on Abdominal Compartment Syndrome Joint Hospital Surgical Grand Round Dr. Leung Tak Lun Canice Prince of Wales Hospital.
An update on liver transplantation Joint Hospital Surgical Grand Round 19/7/2014.
Risё Stribling, MD Medical Director of Liver Transplant St Luke’s Medical Center Associate Professor of Surgery Baylor College of Medicine.
Hepatitis web study H EPATITIS C C URRICULUM Terry D. Box, MD Associate Professor of Medicine Division of Gastroenterology/Hepatology University of Utah.
How to conclude a right hepatectomy Sorina Cornateanu Maximilliano Gelli CHB-Hopital Paul-Brousse ACHBT Jeunes, , Rouen.
Limitations in liver resection: Is preoperative chemotherapy limiting the extent of liver resection? Jürgen Klempnauer Department of General, Visceral.
How far can we go with suboptimal grafts in LDLT. Fumitaka Oike and Koichi Tanaka Dept. Transplant Surgery, Kyoto University, Japan “Small-for-size syndrome.
Anesthesia and Liver Disease E.A. Steele, MD May 4, 2005.
STS 2015 John V. Conte, MD Professor of Surgery Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine On Behalf of the CoreValve US Investigators Transcatheter Aortic.
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine New Trends in organ donation and Transplantation Juan Carlos Caicedo, MD FACS Director, Hispanic Transplant.
liver function monitoring
What makes a pancreas allograft marginal? Peter J Friend University of Oxford.
Long-Term Survival Following Hepatectomy for Hepatocellular Carcinoma Sheung Tat FAN Department of Surgery, The University of HongKong Chair Professor.
Classification and management of bile duct injury
ELTR 12/2008 The Present Evolution of Liver Transplantation 1. General evolution of LT in Europe 2. Donor data 3. Recipient data 4. Indications and results.
 Is the replacement of a diseased liver with a healthy liver allograft.  Used technique is orthotopic transplantation, in which the native liver is.
PORTAL HYPERTENSION & CHRONIC LIVER DISEASE SEAN CHEN ST GEORGE HEPATOBILIARY & PANCREATIC WORKSHOP 31/05/2014.
Heart Transplantation for Patients with a Fontan Procedure
CIRRHOSIS OF LIVER PORTAL HYPERTENSION HEPATIC ENCHEPALOPATHY
Liver Transplantation Philip Goodney, MD June 22, 2005.
50 year old man with history of Hodgkin Lymphoma as a child, treated with mediastinal radiation, now presenting with severe heart failure.
Abdominal Compartment Syndrome Vijith Vijayasekaran Advanced Trainee Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Royal Perth Hospital.
Periportal Fibrosis Without Cirrhosis Does Not Affect Outcomes Following Continuous Flow Ventricular Assist Device Implantation Jonathon E. Sargent, BS,
Comparison of HTK and UW in Abdominal Transplantation Dr. Richard S. Mangus, MD MS Indiana University, School of Medicine.
Strategies for Maximizing Outcomes in Liver Transplantation James D. Eason, M.D. Chief of Transplantation / Professor of Surgery University of Tennessee.
Portal Hypertension portal venous pressure > 5 mmHg
LIVER TRANSPLANTATION- BASICS IN SURGERY
Adult Medical- Surgical Nursing Gastro-intestinal Module: Liver Cirrhosis.
+ Liver Transplantation for PSC Patients A Transplant Surgeon’s Perspective Tiffany Anthony, MD Annette C. and Harold C. Simmons Transplant Institute Baylor.
Dr.Mohammad foudazi Research center of endoscopic surgery, Iran medical university.
Living Donor Liver Transplantation in PSC Patients Giuliano Testa, MD, FACS, MBA Surgical Director, Living Donor Liver Transplantation Baylor University.
Study of cytokine gene polymorphism and graft outcome in live-donor kidney transplantation By Rashad Hassan MD Amgad El-Agroudy, Ahmad Hamdy, Amani Mostafa.
Region 10 and In situ Split of the Deceased Donor Liver OSOTC Education Conference September 11, 2015.
12/2013 The Present Evolution of Liver Transplantation in Europe EUROPEAN LIVER TRANSPLANT REGISTRY 28 countries institutions 118,441 transplantations.
Laparoscopic Liver Resections David A. Kooby, MD, FACS Associate Professor of Surgery Division of Surgical Oncology Emory University School of Medicine.
Transileocolic portal vein embolisation
Risk Factors for Adverse Outcome after HeartMate II Jennifer Cowger, MD, MS St. Vincent Heart Center of Indiana Advanced Heart Failure, Transplant, & Mechanical.
Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosytemic Shunt Kevin A. Smith, MD Interventional Radiologist Roper Radiologists, PA.
Complications of liver cirrhosis
Andreas A. Rostved, MD Research assistant Department of Surgical Gastroenterology and Transplantation Rigshospitalet – Copenhagen University Hospital Denmark.
Professor Nigel Heaton Kings Health Partners
Treatment Strategy for Recurrent Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Salvage Transplantation, Repeated Resection, or Radiofrequency Ablation? Albert C. Y. Chan,
United States Organ Transplantation SRTR & OPTN Annual Data Report, 2011 Kidney.
INTRODUCTION. The annual incidence of liver transplant outcomes in South America has been unknown. So far direct correlations have been reported between.
Experience of ALPPS procedure in treating hepatocellular carcinoma
Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors / angiotensin receptor blockers and contrast induced nephropathy in patients receiving cardiac catheterization:
RECONSTRUCTION OF TYPE 3 VARIANT OF LEFT HEPATIC VEIN IN A LEFT LATERAL SEGMENT LIVER GRAFT FROM A LIVING DONOR Fadl H Veerankutty, Varghese Yeldho, Shabeer.
The Relationship between Postoperative Serum Albumin Level and Organ Dysfunction after Liver Transplantation. Results No differences were found between.
Renoportal Anastomosis in Left Lateral Lobe Living Donor Liver Transplantation: A Pediatric Case - DOI: / Fig. 1. Pretransplant computed.
Liver transplantation and PSC
Renal Unit-Careggi University Hospital-Florence-Italy
Copyright © 2001 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
Cirrhosis Key features:
HCV & liver transplantation
CASE PRESENTATION DR SANJAY MAITRA, DR DENISH SAVALIA,
Nalaka Gunawansa, John McCall, Stephen Munn, Peter Johnston
以單孔方式進行再次胸腔鏡手術做主要肺切除的可行性 The Feasibility of Major Lung Resection in Repeated Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS) by Single-Port Approach Ying-Yuan.
Liver Transplantation: 50 years
Orthotopic liver transplant, recurrent non-alcoholic steatohepatitis
Risk Factors associated with Outcome
Volume 119, Issue 4, Pages (October 2000)
Does Liver Regeneration Increase the Postoperative HCC Recurrence after Curative Resection ? Jin-Ho Lee, MD. Department of Surgery, Yonsei University.
Results of Living Donor Age of Sixth Decade for Adult Liver Transplantation Using a Right Lobe graft Seok-Hwan Kim.
Presentation transcript:

SMALL FOR SIZE IN LIVER SURGERY Ghent, 11 th March 2005 THE HEMIPORTOCAVAL SHUNT R. Troisi, MD PhD Hepatobiliary and Liver Transplantation Service Ghent University Hospital Medical School GHENT - BELGIUM

Living Donor Liver Transplantation The Evolution  3 D Reconstructive imaging for graft selection - precise 3D map of vascular and biliary anatomy and calculation of remnant at risk  Strategies for small for size grafts - intragraft responses to shear stress - inflow modulation techniques  Operational Tolerance - induction with policlonal AB’s - combined stem cells / living donor Tx

ELTR 06/2003 Evolution of the Number of Living Related Liver Transplantations in Europe (n = 1286)

ELTR 06/2003 Right liver (5, 6, 7, 8): 540 (93%) Left liver (seg. 2,3,4) : 25 (4%) Left lobe (S 2, 3) : 16 (3%) Type of Graft used for Adult LRLT

ELTR 06/2003 Graft Survival according to the Type of Living Related Graft in LRLT- Adults Right liver : 537 Left lobe : 15 Left liver : 29 (%) Yrs Total Log rank test p< 0.001

Living Donor Liver Transplantation Causes of Graft Loss / Mortality in Adults Sepsis53% Hemorrhage14% Vascular14% Recurrent Disease 2-3% Other16% (Broelsch, LT 2003) Graft dysfunction (?) SFSS (?) Outflow insufficiency (?)

Living Donor Liver Transplantation Relationships between Techniques and Complications Small for Size Syndrome Vascular thrombosis Bleeding Biliary complications leaks stenosis Venous outflow insufficiency New surgical techniques

Small-For-Size Syndrome FUNCTIONAL GRAFT MASS GV Fatty liver / Age Parenchymal disease GRAFT INJURY WI / CI Rejection Venous Outflow Graft Inflow METABOLIC DEMAND Pre-Tx status Post-Tx complications

ENHANCED HEPATOCYTE INJURY DELAYED SYNTHETIC FUNCTION PROLONGED CHOLESTASIS RENAL FAILURE ASCITES FORMATION SEPTIC COMPLICATIONS SEVERE GRAFT DYSFUNCTION REDUCED GRAFT SURVIVAL LESS OUTCOME Manifestations of the SFSS

Macroscopic appearance Sinusoidal congestion Biliary thrombi vacuolar degeneration Single apoptotic change in hepatocytes Man K, Ann Surg 2003 Pathology of SFSG: Parenchymal Cells Lines

Microscopic features sinusoidal disruption hepatocytes ballooning vacuolar degeneration mitochondrial swelling Pathology of SFSG: Parenchymal Cells Lines Man K, Ann Surg 2003

The Intragraft Responses Portal hyperperfusion Small functional mass CONGESTION Intragraft Responses SHEAR STRESS Cytokines Macrophages Adhesion molecules Egr – 1 (a) ET-1 (c) HSPs (a) HO-1 (b,c) a)Ting-Bo Liang, Transplantation 2003 b)Zhen-Fan Yang, AJT 2003 c)Man K, Ann Surg 2003 DOWN UP

Variations in Graft Arterial and Portal Flow between the Physiological Setting (Donors) and following Graft Reperfusion (Recipients) (Troisi R, Ann Surg 2003)

Effects of Splenic Artery Ligation on Graft Inflow (Troisi R, Ann Surg 2003)

Effects of Splenic Artery Ligation on Outcome (Troisi R, Liver Transplantation 2003) (n = 14) (n = 10)

 Mean flows  diastolic / systolic  Diastolic filling  patency  Pulsatile index  quality anastomosis  Flow curve  Outflow Spasm Kinking Transit Time Flow Measurement (TTFM)

Rationale for HPCS Mean of 90 ml/min/100 g liver = Normal PVF in donors Mean of 270 – 350 ml/min/100 g liver = ± 3 x PVF after reperfusion → SAL Mean PVF of > 360 ml/min/100 g liver =SAL + PVB or HEMI PORTO CAVAL SHUNT

HPCS: Standard Technique for SFSG

Left Lobe LDLT: Outflow Reconstruction Advantages of a Left Liver No congestion (since including the MHV) Liver function less depressed (bigger remnant) Less overall donor morbidity Disadvantages of a Left Liver Difficult position/risks of HV twist Artery smaller Less liver mass

Calibration of HPCS in Left Lobe

Hemodynamic Features in Shunted Left Lobe HPCS LPV HPCS LHA

Effects of HPCS for Inflow Modulation on the Outcome of SFSG in LDLT Graft hemodynamics in SFSG Features of non-parenchymal cell lines following portal shunt Clinical outcome (Troisi R, Am J Transplantation 2005)

ParameterG1 (n = 5)G2 (n = 10)P* Mean age (years  SD)52.6 ± ± Median FU (months  SD)5 ± 1317 ± UNOS Status 2(n)5/59/10- MELD score (  SD)20 ± 618 ± 40.9 Esoph Varices gr. II/III(n)58- Right Liver (n)45- Left Liver (n) ** * Mann-Whitney U-test; ** Fisher exact test Patient’s Demographics

ParameterG1 (n = 5)G2 (n = 10)P* Mean GW (gr.)662 ± 136 (464 – 890)589 ± 265 (404 – 836)0.39 Mean GRBWR0,73 ± 0,1% (0,58 - 0,80)0,70 ± 0,1% (0,56 - 0,80)0.69 RIHV anastomosed2/5 (40%)4/10 (40%)- S5 – S8 drainage2/5 (40%)4/10 (40%)- OP Time (min)630 ± 104 (420 – 820)621 ± 149 (450 – 811)0.43 Blood Loss (ml)2300 ± 2700 (500 – 4000)2350 ± 2720 (200 – 6000)0.53 CIT (min.)216 ± 78 (170 – 360)193 ± 51 (120– 250)0.83 WIT (min.)53,7 ± 14,3 (35 – 70)64 ± 12,9 (45– 92)0.72 PART (min.)51,2 ± 14,3 (30 – 60)58,4 ± 7,9 (45–65)0.35 *Spearman rank order correlation Donor’s Characteristics

ParameterLeft Livers (n = 6)Right Livers (n = 9)P* dPVF 462 ± ± (ml/min) dPVF/GW 121  ± (ml/min/100 g liver) * Wilcoxon matched pairs test. Donor’s Graft Hemodynamics: Left vs Right Livers

ParameterG1 (n=5)Parameter G2 (n = 10) P * Cardiac Index a 4.7 ± 1.6Cardiac Index4.6 ± HPCS/GW b -HPCS/GW 330 ± 230 (60-620) - rPVF1/GW460 ± 30 ( ) rPVF2/GW 190 ± 70 (15-260) rPVF1/GW/CI c 80 ± 20 (50-100)rPVF2/GW/CI 50 ± 160 (3-71) rHAF1/GW9 ± 8 (2-20)rHAF2/GW 32 ± 20 (10-63) rHAF1/GW/CI 2 ± 1 (0.6-1)rHAF2/GW/CI 7 ± 3 (2-16) * Mann-Whitney U-test; a L/min/m2; b Graft Weight (ml/min/100 g liver); c Cardiac index HPCS: portal flow shunted away; rPVF 1: total portal vein flow to the graft; rPVF 2: portal flow to the graft after opening of the HPCS; rHAF 1: hepatic artery flow to the graft; rHAF 2: hepatic artery flow to the graft after opening of the HPCS. Inflow Modulation by HPCS

Portal vein flow (cm/sec.)G1 (no shunt)G2 (shunt)P* POD ± ± POD ± ± > 1 month65 ± ± Hepatic artery flow POD ± ± POD 731 ± ± > 1 month30 ± ± * Mann-Whitney U-test;POD: postoperative day US-Doppler in Non-Shunted vs Shunted Grafts

Graph.1: Evolution of total bilirubin * p = ** p = *** p = * * ** *** G1 G2 *, **, *** Mann-Whitney U-test

Graph.2: Evolution of prothrombin time G1 G2 * p = ** p = *** p = * ** *** * ** *** *, **, *** Mann-Whitney U-test

Graph.3: Evolution of ascites leak G1 G2 * p = ** p = *** p = * * ** *** *, **, *** Mann-Whitney U-test

Graph.4: Serum creatinine at POD 21 * p = * * * Mann-Whitney U-test

Fig. 1: Serial relative changes in liver volume. Relative changes in liver volume (%) *p = ns * *

ComplicationsG 1G 2P* Enkephalopathy1/5 (20%)0/100.3 Massive ascites leak4/5 (80%)1/10 (10%)0.01 SFSS3/5 (60%)0/ Retransplantation3/5 (60%)1/10 (10%)0.06 Sepsis/MOF3/5 (60%)1/10 (10%)0.06 Acute Rejection2/5 (40%)3/10 (30%)1.0 Thrombosis HPCS-0/10- * Fisher’s exact test Overall Results

No HPCS (n = 5) 80% HPCS (n = 10) OVERALL GRAFT SURVIVAL Log Rank P = %

Enhanced portal graft hyperperfusion in SFSG is significantly correlated to postoperative graft dysfunction and SFSS The RE system is irreversibly damaged in these grafts whereas HPCS do preserve lobular architecture Hemi-Porto-Caval shunt permits an extensive reduction of the graft inflow improving hepatic artery flow HPCS do not worsens postoperative graft function, graft regeneration. General outcome is generally improved Careful perioperative management is however recommended (i.e. risks of sepsis) Conclusions (1)

Basing on the Asian data on reduced donor morbidity with the use of the left livers, upon this experience could we implement the use of left liver grafts for adult recipients? Conclusions (2)