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©2013 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastroenterol. Dec 28, 2013; 19(48): 9146-9155
Published online Dec 28, 2013. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i48.9146
Published online Dec 28, 2013. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i48.9146
Ref. | Patient | Population | Follow up | Graft survival | Patient survival | NAFLD recurrence in graft | Predictors of NAFLD recurrence | Predictors of survival |
National registry data | ||||||||
Charlton et al[13] | 35781 adults adult liver transplant recipientNASH primary or secondary indication for 1959 recipient | SRTR (US national data) of liver transplant recipients from 2001 to 2009Included NASH plus 50% of CRC and NASH plus CRC with BMI > 30 kg/m2) | 3 yr post-transplant survival reported | NASH 3-yr survival 76% (similar to other indications) | NASH 1-yr survival 84% and 3-yr 78% CRC 1 -yr survival 86% and 3 -yr 79%Other Diagnoses 1-yr survival 87% and 3-yr 78% (P = 0.67) | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
Singal et al[18] | 54687 adult liver transplant recipientNASH 1368 recipients | UNOS adult liver transplant recipients from 1994 to 2009 | 10-yr survival reported | 1-yr, 3-yr, 50-yr and 10-yr survival NASH: 86%, 82%, 80% and 80%NAFLD post-transplant survival similar to cholestatic liver disease, HBV and better than ALD, CRC, HCV and HCC | 1-yr, 3-yr, 5-yr and 10-yr survival NASH: 89%, 85%, 84% and 84% NAFLD post-transplant survival similar to cholestatic liver disease, HBV and better than ALD, CRC, HCV and HCC | Not reported | Not reported | For all recipients, age of recipient, male recipient black race, ventilator support pre transplant and MELD score as well as donor risk index associated with worse patient survival |
Afzali et al[17] | 53738 adult liver transplant recipientsNASH 1810recipients | UNOS adult liver transplant recipients from 1997 to 2010 | 5-yr survival reported | Not reported | 1-yr, 3-yr and 5-yr survivalNASH: 88%, 82% and 77%Overall adjusted HR for NASH post-transplant mortality compared to other etiologies was 0.75 (95%CI: 0.66-0.85)Adjusted survival was better for NASH than for ALD, HCV, and HCC.NASH survival was worse than cholestatic liver disease, AIH, HBV | Not reported | Not reported | Not specified- although state survival adjusted for several donor, recipient characteristics (individual Hazards ratios not reported) |
Single center studies | ||||||||
Tanaka et al[57] | 7 patient with NAFLD (425 total LDLT recipients) | Patients with NAFLD that underwent Live donor liver transplant at a single center in Japan between 1996 and 2013 | Median follow up 5.3 yr | 100% at last follow up | 100% at last follow up | 1/7 (14%) had recurrent NASH | Not reported | Not reported |
El Atrache et al[27] | 83 recipient, NALFD[46] and CRC[37] | Liver transplant recipients at a single US center between 1996 and 2008 | Mean follow up 46 mo | 12/83 underwent re-transplantation | 12 recipients died. Overall survival not reported | NAFLD recurrence in 20/83 recipients (15 with NASH pre-transplant and 5 with CRC pre-transplant | Predictors of recurrence were metabolic syndrome, hypertension and Insulin use as well as hyperlipidemia after transplant | Five year survival worse for those with metabolic syndrome, hypertension and insulin useNo difference in survival between those with NASH recurrence and those without |
Dureja et al[26] | 88 recipients with NAFLD | Liver transplant recipients at a single US center between 1993 and 2007 | Mean follow up 82 mo | Not reported | 5-yr patient survival similar between those with NAFLD recurrence and those without NAFLD recurrence (P = 0.78) | NAFLD Disease Recurrence in 34/88 (39%) | Pre and post-transplant BMI. Triglyceride levels and prednisone dose was higher in those with NAFLD recurrence | Post-transplant survival was worse in NAFLD patients with post-transplant cardiac disease (HR 3.2, 95%CI: 1.3-7.7) |
Agopian et al[20] | 144 recipients with NAFLD (total 1294 transplants) | Liver transplant recipients at a single US center between 1993 and 2011 | Mean follow up 2.3 yr | Graft survival similar between NAFLD and non NAFLD (90 d survival 86% for NASH) and lower only than PBC/PSC (90 d graft survival of 94%)5-yr graft survival for NASH 63% similar to ALD, HBV, CC and PBC/PSC but better than HCV | Patient survival similar between NASH and non-NASH. 90 d survival 90% for NASH5-yr patient survival for NASH (70%) similar to ALD, HBV, CC and PBC/PSC but better than HCV | NASH recurrence in 23 (16%) | Not reported | Post-transplant BMI > 35 kg/m2independent factor for mortality in NAFLD recipients only. Pretransplant dialysis also had worse survival in NASH patients |
Kennedy et al[21] | 129 recipients with NAFLD and 775 with other liver disease | Liver transplant recipients at a single US center between 1999 and 2009 | 5-yr survival reported | Graft survival not reported | 1-yr, 3 -yr, and 5-yr survivalNASH: 90%, 88% and 85% Non-NASH: 92%, 86% and 80% (P = NS) Mortality within 4 mo higher in NASH -8.5% vs non –NASH 4.2%, P = 0.04 | Not reported | Not reported | No predictors of survival found |
Barritt et al[24] | 21 recipients with NAFLD and 97 with other liver disease | Liver transplant recipients at a single US center between 2004 and 2007 | 3-yr survival reported | 30-d graft survival worse in NAFLD (81%) vs non-NAFLD (95%), P = 0.021-yr survival for NAFLD and non-NAFLD patients was 76% vs 83%, P = 0.32 3-yr survival was 76% for NAFLD vs 73% for non-NAFLD, P = 0.78 | 30-d patient survival worse in NAFLD (81%) vs non-NAFLD (97%), (81% vs 97%, P = 0.001)1-yr survival for NAFLD and non-NAFLD patients was 76% vs 90%, P = 0.06 3-yr survival was 76% for NAFLD vs 84% for non-NAFLD, P = 0.23 | Not reported | Not reported | 3-yr survival was significantly worse for diabetic patients compared to non-diabetics (63% vs 89%, P = 0.006) |
Yalamanchili et al[22] | 40 recipients with NAFLD | Liver transplant recipients at a single German center between 2007 and 2011 | 1-yr survival reported | Not reported | 30 d mortality for NAFLD patients was 25% and 1-yr mortality was 35% | Not reported | Not reported | Patients with BMI > 35 kg/m2had worse graft survival (1-yr graft failure 55%) than those with lower BMI |
Contos et al[32] | 30 recipients with CRC and NASH compared to patients with ALD[16] and PBC/PSC[12] | Liver transplant recipients at a single US center between 2004 and 2007 | Median follow up 3.5 yr | Graft survival similar between NAFLD and non-NAFLD patients (P = 0.32) | Patient survival similar between NAFLD and non-NAFLD patients (P = 0.32) | 100% of the 30 NAFLD patients had steatosis in the graft by 5-yr post-transplant compared to 25% in the ALD and PBC/PSC groups | Steroid dose post-transplant associated with NAFLD recurrence | Not reported |
Ong et al[31] | 51 recipients with CRC | Liver transplant recipients at a single US center between 2004 and 2007 | > 6 mo post-transplant, not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Post-transplant NAFLD developed in 25% and NASH in 16% | Predictors of post-transplant NAFLD was pre or post-transplant diabetes and triglyceride levels | Not reported |
Bhagat et al[19] | 71 NAFLD patients compared to 83 ALD patients | Liver transplant recipients at a single US center between 1997 and 2007 | Median follow up 1517 d in NAFLD group and 1686 d in ALD group | Graft survival similar between NAFLD (76%) and ALD (82%) | 1-yr, 3-yr, 5-yr, and 9-yr survival NASH: 82%, 79%, 75%, and 62% ALD: 92%,86%, 86%, and 76% (P = 0.17) | NAFLD recurrence was 33% (21/64 NASH patients) | None reported | No predictive factors in NAFLD |
Malik et al[23] | 98 NAFLD recipients compared to 196 with PBC/PSC196 with ALD 196, with HCV 98, with CR | Liver transplant recipients at a single US center between 2004 and 2007 | Mean follow-up was 994 d | Not reported | Survival similar between NAFLD and non-NAFLD recipients30-d mortality in NAFLD 6.1% 1-yr mortality 21.4% in NAFLD (similar to controls)3-yr mortality in NAFLD 25% similar to controls, less in PBC (15%) 5-yr mortality (28%) similar in NAFLD patients and controls | Not reported | Not reported | Sepsis accounted for more deaths in NAFLD transplant recipientsLiver recipients transplanted for NASHcirrhosis who died within the first post-transplant year were more likely tobe older (≥ 60 yr), more obese (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) and have both pretransplant diabetes and Hypertension |
- Citation: Said A. Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and liver transplantation: Outcomes and advances. World J Gastroenterol 2013; 19(48): 9146-9155
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v19/i48/9146.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v19.i48.9146