Challenges faced in establishing a pediatric liver transplant program in a lower‐middle‐income country with free healthcare service

Author:

Fernando Meranthi123ORCID,Tillakaratne Suchintha134,Gunetilleke Bhagya135,Liyanage Chamila6,Appuhamy Chinthaka134,Weerasuriya Aruna134,Uragoda Buddhika3,Welikala Nadeeshya135,Ranaweera Liyanage3,Ganewatte Eranga6,Dissanayake Janaki3,Mudalige Anushka3,Siriwardana Rohan134

Affiliation:

1. Colombo North Centre For Liver Diseases Ragama Sri Lanka

2. Department of Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine University of Kelaniya Kelaniya Sri Lanka

3. Colombo North Teaching Hospital Ragama Sri Lanka

4. Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine University of Kelaniya Kelaniya Sri Lanka

5. Division of Anaesthesia, Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine University of Kelaniya Kelaniya Sri Lanka

6. Lady Ridgeway Hospital For Children Colombo Sri Lanka

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundLiver transplant is the cure for children with liver failure. Sri Lanka is a lower‐middle‐income country with a predominant free, state health system. Pediatric liver transplant program in Sri Lanka is still in the budding state where the initial experience of the program is yet to be documented.MethodsA retrospective review was performed including the clinical characteristics of all pediatric liver transplant recipients of Colombo North Centre for Liver Diseases since the inception of the program from June 2020 to May 2023.ResultsThere were 14 PLT performed in 3 years. The median recipient age and weight were 8 years (6 months–15 years) and 23.3 kg (6.4–49.2), respectively. The majority were boys (64%). All were from low‐income backgrounds. Indications for LT were acute liver failure (5/14), decompensated chronic liver disease (5/14), and acute on chronic liver failure (4/14). Underlying liver diseases were Wilson disease (6/14), autoimmune liver disease (3/14), biliary atresia (2/14) and progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 (1/14), and unknown etiology (2/14). The majority were living donor liver transplants (86%). Of the living donors, 42% (5/12) were Buddhist priests. There were three immediate deaths and two late deaths. The 3‐month survival was 78%, and overall survival was 64%. Living donor transplants carried a higher success rate (92%) compared to diseased donor transplants (0%; 2/2).ConclusionsInitial experience of pediatric liver transplant program of Sri Lanka is promising despite being established in a free healthcare system amidst the crisis circumstances.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Transplantation,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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