Graft Steatosis and Donor Diabetes Mellitus Additively Impact on Recipient Outcomes After Liver Transplantation—A European Registry Study

Author:

Sonneveld Milan J.12ORCID,Parouei Fatemeh12,den Hoed Caroline12,de Jonge Jeroen23,Salarzaei Morteza12,Porte Robert J.23,Janssen Harry L. A.124,de Rosner‐van Rosmalen Marieke5,Vogelaar Serge5,van der Meer Adriaan J.12,Maan Raoel12,Murad Sarwa Darwish12,Polak Wojciech G.23,Brouwer Willem Pieter12

Affiliation:

1. Department Gastroenterology and Hepatology Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

2. Erasmus MC Transplant Institute Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

3. Division of HPB and Transplantation Surgery Department of Surgery Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

4. Toronto Centre for Liver Disease University Health Network Toronto Canada

5. Eurotransplant Foundation Leiden The Netherlands

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackground and AimsBiopsy‐proven severe graft steatosis is associated with adverse outcomes after liver transplantation. The concomitant presence of metabolic risk factors might further increase this risk. We studied the association between graft steatosis and metabolic risk factors in the donor, with recipient outcomes after liver transplantation.MethodsWe analyzed data from all consecutive first adult full‐graft donation after brain death (DBD) liver transplantations performed in the Eurotransplant region between 2010 and 2020. The presence of graft steatosis and metabolic risk factors was assessed through a review of donor (imaging) reports, and associations with recipient retransplantation‐free survival were studied through survival analyses.ResultsOf 12 174 transplantations, graft steatosis was detected in 2689 (22.1%), and donor diabetes mellitus (DM), hypertension, and dyslipidemia were present in 1245 (10.2%), 5056 (41.5%), and 524 (4.3%). In multivariable Cox regression analysis, graft steatosis (adjusted HR [aHR] 1.197, p < 0.001) and donor DM (aHR 1.157, p = 0.004) were independently associated with impaired retransplantation‐free survival. Graft steatosis and donor DM conferred an additive risk of retransplantation or death (DM alone, aHR: 1.156 [p = 0.0185]; steatosis alone, aHR: 1.200 [p < 0.001]; both steatosis and DM, aHR: 1.381 [p < 0.001]). Findings were consistent in sensitivity analyses focusing on retransplantation‐free survival within 7 days.ConclusionsGraft steatosis and donor diabetes mellitus additively increase the risk of retransplantation or death in adult DBD liver transplantation. Future studies should focus on methods to assess and improve the quality of these high‐risk grafts. Until such time, caution should be exercised when considering these grafts for transplantation.

Publisher

Wiley

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