AI Article Synopsis

  • There is a growing shortage of ideal donor organs, leading to longer wait times for liver transplants, prompting teams to expand criteria for acceptable donor organs.
  • Researchers studied a 2-year period at a single institution, analyzing patients' decisions to accept or refuse different types of extended criteria liver grafts based on factors like age, sex, and disease characteristics.
  • Findings showed that most patients were open to accepting these grafts, with older patients and those with certain conditions (like hepatocellular carcinoma) more likely to accept, indicating the need to reassess patient consent as their health status changes on the waitlist.

Article Abstract

Introduction And Objectives: There is a shortage of ideal donor organs with consequential increasing waitlist times, drop-off, and mortality. Teams have thus extended the donor criteria. Little is known about patients' actual choices and what factors may influence their decisions regarding different extended criteria liver grafts.

Patients And Methods: The documented acceptance or refusal of seven extended criteria liver graft types of patients consented for transplant in a single institution over a 2-year period was reviewed. Patient factors including sex, age, indication, aetiology, and model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) score were analysed using logistic regression.

Results: Most patients were willing to accept most graft types. MELD score did not impact the acceptance or refusal of any graft type. Older patients and those with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) or ascites had significantly higher rates of acceptance. Hepatitis B or C disease aetiology was predictive of willingness to accept a similarly infected graft, respectively. HCC was predictive of acceptance of grafts from donors with a cancer history.

Conclusions: In general, patients embrace the available extended criteria donors. Our analysis suggests that consent should be revisited as patients deteriorate or ameliorate on the waitlist, especially if in the form of ascites or HCC but not necessarily MELD score.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aohep.2022.100686DOI Listing

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