4.0 Article

Our evolution in the treatment of hepatic artery and portal vein thrombosis in pediatric liver transplantation: Success with catheter-directed therapies

Journal

PEDIATRIC TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 26, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/petr.14306

Keywords

angioplasty; hepatic artery thrombosis; pediatric liver transplantation; portal vein thrombosis; thrombolysis

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A retrospective cohort analysis of 27 pediatric liver transplant recipients who experienced hepatic artery thrombosis (n=13), portal vein thrombosis (n=9), or both (n=5) showed a 100% success rate in catheter-directed recanalization in re-establishing blood flow to the graft. Compared to surgical recanalization or anticoagulation alone, catheter-directed recanalization not only increased patency but also decreased mortality in these patients.
Background In pediatric liver transplant recipients, hepatic artery thrombosis and portal vein thrombosis are major causes of acute graft failure and mortality within 30 days of transplantation. There is, however, a strong possibility of graft salvage if flow can be re-established to reduce ischemic injury. The current standard treatment is surgical revascularization, and if unsuccessful, retransplantation. Due to our success in treating these complications with catheter-directed therapies, we sought to summarize and publish the outcomes of all patients who experienced hepatic artery thrombosis or portal vein thrombosis within 30 days of liver transplantation. Methods We conducted a retrospective cohort analysis of 27 pediatric liver transplant recipients who experienced hepatic artery thrombosis (n = 13), portal vein thrombosis (n = 9), or both (n = 5) between September 2012 and March 2021. We collected and tabulated data on the patients and therapies performed to treat them, including success rates, primary and secondary patency, and clinical outcomes. Results Among these patients, 6 were managed with anticoagulation and relisting for transplant and 21 had a primary revascularization attempt. Surgical recanalization was attempted in 7 patients of which 3 had successful recanalization (43%) and catheter-directed recanalization was attempted in 14 patients with 100% success in re-establishing blood flow to the graft. Additionally, patency was increased, and mortality was decreased in patients treated with catheter-directed recanalization compared to surgical revascularization or anticoagulation alone. Conclusion This data illustrates the need to further investigate catheter-directed thrombolysis as a potential first-line treatment for postoperative HAT and PVT in pediatric liver transplant recipients.

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