4.5 Review

The Emerging Role of Viability Testing During Liver Machine Perfusion

Journal

LIVER TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 876-886

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lt.26092

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The transplant community is facing challenges due to the shortage of suitable liver donor organs and the increasing number of unused livers with deteriorating quality. Ex situ machine perfusion provides additional data for assessing liver graft viability and predicting postoperative risks.
The transplant community continues to be challenged by the disparity between the need for liver transplantation and the shortage of suitable donor organs. At the same time, the number of unused donor livers continues to increase, most likely attributed to the worsening quality of these organs. To date, there is no reliable marker of liver graft viability that can predict good posttransplant outcomes. Ex situ machine perfusion offers additional data to assess the viability of donor livers before transplantation. Hence, livers initially considered unsuitable for transplantation can be assessed during machine perfusion in terms of appearance and consistency, hemodynamics, and metabolic and excretory function. In addition, postoperative complications such as primary nonfunction or posttransplant cholangiopathy may be predicted and avoided. A variety of viability criteria have been used in machine perfusion, and to date there is no widely accepted composition of criteria for clinical use. This review discusses potential viability markers for hepatobiliary function during machine perfusion, describes current limitations, and provides future recommendations for the use of viability criteria in clinical liver transplantation.

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