Time for Action to Address the Persistent Sex-Based Disparity in Liver Transplant Access
Author:
Affiliation:
1. Center for Liver Disease and Transplantation, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, New York
2. Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology & Hepatology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco
Publisher
American Medical Association (AMA)
Subject
Surgery
Link
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamasurgery/articlepdf/2765986/jamasurgery_verna_2020_vp_200009.pdf
Reference7 articles.
1. Disparities in liver transplantation before and after introduction of the MELD score.;Moylan;JAMA,2008
2. Reduced access to liver transplantation in women: role of height, MELD exception scores, and renal function underestimation.;Allen;Transplantation,2018
3. MELD-GRAIL-Na: glomerular filtration rate and mortality on liver-transplant waiting list.;Asrani;Hepatology,2019
4. Height contributes to the gender difference in wait-list mortality under the MELD-based liver allocation system.;Lai;Am J Transplant,2010
5. Identifying a clinically relevant cutoff for height that is associated with a higher risk of waitlist mortality in liver transplant candidates.;Ge;Am J Transplant,2020
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1. GEMA-Na and MELD 3.0 severity scores to address sex disparities for accessing liver transplantation: a nationwide retrospective cohort study;eClinicalMedicine;2024-08
2. Variation in intention-to-treat survival by MELD subtypes: all models created for end-stage liver disease are not equal;Journal of Hepatology;2024-08
3. Sex disparity in liver allocation within Eurotransplant;American Journal of Transplantation;2024-07
4. First consensus document of waiting list prioritization for liver transplantation by the Spanish Society of Liver Transplantation (SETH);Revista Española de Enfermedades Digestivas;2024
5. Nonmechanical preservation and allocation of liver grafts;The Liver Graft Before Transplantation;2024
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