Vascular thrombosis after pediatric liver transplantation: Is prevention achievable?

Abstract

Background

Vascular thromboses (VT) are life-threatening events after pediatric liver transplantation (LT). Single-center studies have identified risk factors for intra-abdominal VT, but large-scale pediatric studies are lacking.

Methods

This multicenter retrospective cohort study of isolated pediatric LT recipients assessed pre- and perioperative variables to determine VT risk factors and anticoagulation-associated bleeding complications.

Results

Within seven postoperative days, 31/331 (9.37%) patients developed intra-abdominal VT. Open fascia occurred more commonly in patients with VT (51.61 vs 23.33%) and remained the only independent risk factor in multivariable analysis (OR = 2.84, p = 0.012). Patients with VT received more blood products (83.87 vs 50.00%), had significantly higher rates of graft loss (22.58 vs 1.33%), infection (50.00 vs 20.60%), and unplanned return to the operating room (70.97 vs 16.44%) compared to those without VT. The risk of bleeding was similar (p = 0.2) between patients on and off anticoagulation.

Conclusions

Prophylactic anticoagulation did not increase bleeding complications in this cohort. The only independent factor associated with VT was open fascia, likely a graft/recipient size mismatch surrogate, supporting the need to improve surgical techniques to prevent VT that may not be modifiable with anticoagulation.

Department

Description

Provenance

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1016/j.liver.2023.100185

Publication Info

Martinez, Mercedes, Elise Kang, Fernando Beltramo, Michael Nares, Asumthia Jeyapalan, Alicia Alcamo, Alexandra Monde, Leslie Ridall, et al. (2023). Vascular thrombosis after pediatric liver transplantation: Is prevention achievable?. Journal of liver transplantation, 12. p. 100185. 10.1016/j.liver.2023.100185 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/29613.

This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.

Scholars@Duke

Kamath

Sameer Shantaram Kamath

Associate Professor of Pediatrics

I love children and everything about them. I believe in caring for each of my patients as I would my own children. I believe in investing in systems of care and ensuring that the care we provide is safe, efficient and evidence-based.

I am interested in quality/performance improvement and making systems more efficient. 


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