4.4 Article

The impact of hepatitis C virus direct acting agents in liver transplant using very old donor grafts: a real-world single-center analysis

Journal

UPDATES IN SURGERY
Volume 74, Issue 2, Pages 557-570

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG ITALIA SRL
DOI: 10.1007/s13304-021-01204-2

Keywords

HCV; DAA; Liver transplant; Old donors; Graft survival

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The study evaluated the impact of DAAs treatment in liver transplantation, showing that DAAs can reduce the risk of HCV-related graft loss in recipients over 70 years old and improve outcomes for older transplant recipients regardless of their HCV serological status.
The correct timing of use of direct acting agents (DAAs) among transplanted patients remains unknown. The aim of this paperwork is to evaluate the impact of DAAs treatment in pre- or peri-operative period in liver transplantation when grafts >= 70 years are used. This is a retrospective analysis comparing adult liver transplant performed for HCV-related cirrhosis and/or hepatocarcinoma using a graft >= 70 in the period 2015-2018 (Group DAA-HCV-OLD, study group) to three different groups: (a) anti-HCV-Ab-negative patients receiving graft >= 70 (no-HCV-OLD), (b) anti-HCV-Ab-negative patients receiving a graft aged 18-69 years (no-HCV-YOUNG), and (c) anti-HCV-Ab-positive patients receiving a donor graft >= 70 in the period 2007-2011 (no-DAA-HCV-OLD). Totally, 528 liver transplants were considered: 164 in DAA-HCV-OLD, 143 in no-HCV-OLD, 120 in no-HCV-YOUNG and 101 in no-DAA-HCV-OLD Group. Graft survival rates at 1 and 3 years were 88% and 81% in DAA-HCV-OLD Group, 82% and 68% in no-DAA-HCV-OLD (p = 0.007), 89% and 84% in no-HCV-OLD (p = 0.76), and 94% and 92% in no-HCV-YOUNG (p = 0.02). No differences were observed among groups in the incidence of primary non-function, primary dysfunction, vascular or biliary complications. DAAs were able to zero HCV-related graft loss, with a 3-year graft survival > 80%. The outcomes of older graft recipients became equal irrespectively of their HCV serological status.

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