AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how perioperative blood transfusions affect short- and long-term outcomes in pediatric living donor liver transplantation (PLDLT) for small patients, focusing on complications and mortality.
  • A total of 240 children were evaluated, with findings revealing that higher volumes of transfusions (over 27.5 mL/kg) were linked to more serious postoperative complications and increased mortality rates over a 10-year follow-up period.
  • In the short term, high-volume transfusion recipients experienced more severe infectious, cardiovascular, and respiratory complications but had fewer rejection complications compared to those with low-volume transfusions.

Article Abstract

Background: The impact of perioperative blood transfusion on short- and long-term outcomes in pediatric living donor liver transplantation (PLDLT) must still be ascertained, mainly among young children. Clinical and surgical postoperative complications related to perioperative blood transfusion are well described up to three months after adult liver transplantation.

Aim: To determine whether transfusion is associated with early and late postoperative complications and mortality in small patients undergoing PLDLT.

Methods: We evaluated the effects of perioperative transfusion on postoperative complications in recipients up to 20 kg of body weight, submitted to PLDLT. A total of 240 patients were retrospectively allocated into two groups according to postoperative complications: Minor complications ( = 109) and major complications ( = 131). Multiple logistic regression analysis identified the volume of perioperative packed red blood cells (RBC) transfusion as the only independent risk factor for major postoperative complications. The receiver operating characteristic curve was drawn to identify the optimal volume of the perioperative RBC transfusion related to the presence of major postoperative complications, defining a cutoff point of 27.5 mL/kg. Subsequently, patients were reallocated to a low-volume transfusion group (LTr; = 103, RBC ≤ 27.5 mL/kg) and a high-volume transfusion group (HTr; = 137, RBC > 27.5 mL/kg) so that the outcome could be analyzed.

Results: High-volume transfusion was associated with an increased number of major complications and mortality during hospitalization up to a 10-year follow-up period. During a short-term period, the HTr showed an increase in major infectious, cardiovascular, respiratory, and bleeding complications, with a decrease in rejection complications compared to the LTr. Over a long-term period, the HTr showed an increase in major infectious, cardiovascular, respiratory, and minor neoplastic complications, with a decrease in rejection complications. Additionally, Cox hazard regression found that high-volume RBC transfusion increased the mortality risk by 3.031-fold compared to low-volume transfusion. The Kaplan-Meier survival curves of the studied groups were compared using log-rank tests and the analysis showed significantly decreased graft survival, but with no impact in patient survival related to major complications. On the other hand, there was a significant decrease in both graft and patient survival, with high-volume RBC transfusion.

Conclusion: Transfusion of RBC volume higher than 27.5 mL/kg during the perioperative period is associated with a significant increase in short- and long-term postoperative morbidity and mortality after PLDLT.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8006094PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v27.i12.1161DOI Listing

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