Vascular thrombosis after pediatric liver transplantation: Is prevention achievable?
Date
2023-11
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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.Type
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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.
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Sameer Shantaram Kamath
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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