4.6 Article

Early liver transplantation after COVID-19 infection: The first report

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages 2279-2284

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ajt.16509

Keywords

clinical research; practice; infection and infectious agents; liver transplantation; hepatology; liver transplantation; living donor

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COVID-19 has impacted solid organ transplantation, but transplant centers have begun performing surgeries despite the pandemic. Post-liver transplant outcomes varied among candidates and donors infected with COVID-19, highlighting the need for further research on the effects of the virus on transplant procedures.
COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) has impacted solid organ transplantation (SOT) in many ways. Transplant centers have initiated SOT despite the COVID-19 pandemic. Although it is suggested to wait for 4 weeks after COVID-19 infection, there are no data to support or refute the timing of liver transplant after COVID-19 infection. Here we describe the course and outcomes of COVID-19-infected candidates and healthy living liver donors who underwent transplantation. A total of 38 candidates and 33 potential living donors were evaluated from May 20, 2020 until October 30, 2020. Ten candidates and five donors were reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) positive for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) pretransplant. Four candidates succumbed preoperatively. Given the worsening of liver disease, four candidates underwent liver transplant after 2 weeks due to the worsening of liver disease and the other two candidates after 4 weeks. Only one recipient died due to sepsis posttransplant. Three donors underwent successful liver donation surgery after 4 weeks of COVID-19 infection without any postoperative complications, and the other two were delisted (as the candidates expired). This report is the first to demonstrate the feasibility of elective liver transplant early after COVID-19 infection.

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