Revising the MELD Score to Address Sex-Bias in Liver Transplant Prioritization for a German Cohort

Author:

Walter Costa Maria Beatriz12ORCID,Gärtner Christiane23ORCID,Schmidt Maria1ORCID,Berg Thomas4ORCID,Seehofer Daniel5ORCID,Kaiser Thorsten13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics, Institute for Laboratory Medicine, Leipzig University Medical Center, Paul-List-Straße 13/15, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany

2. Viral Ecology and Omics, Institute of Biodiversity, Faculty of Biological Sciences, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Rosalind-Franklin Straße 1, D-07745 Jena, Germany

3. Academic Department of Laboratory Medicine, Microbiology and Pathobiochemistry, Medical School and University Medical Center East Westphalia-Lippe, Hospital Lippe, Bielefeld University, Röntgenstraße 18, D-32756 Detmold, Germany

4. Division of Hepatology, Department of Medicine II, Leipzig University Medical Center, Liebigstraße 20, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany

5. Division of Hepatobiliary Surgery and Visceral Transplant Surgery, Department of Visceral, Transplant, Thoracic and Vascular Surgery, Leipzig University Medical Center, Liebigstraße 20, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany

Abstract

(1) Background: Prioritization of patients for liver transplantation in Germany relies on the MELD (model for end-stage liver disease) scoring system that does not consider the patient’s sex. Many studies have shown that women are disadvantaged by the MELD score. Using a large patient cohort from a German liver transplant centre, we investigated options to reduce gender inequality in the patient prioritization for liver transplantation. (2) Methods: We calculated female-as-male MELD scores in our cohort by substituting the serum creatinine of a female patient with that of their male equivalent to test for the fairness of the scores. We investigated the effects of the female-as-male scores compared to the original MELD score of 1759 patients listed for liver transplantation. (3) Results: Serum creatinine sex correction (female-as-male) for MELD scores added up to 5.4 points in females, while the median changed by +1.6 points for females. We identified 72 females with an original MELD score < 20, for whom the adjusted female-as-male MELD score would be >20, thus giving them a better chance to receive a liver transplant. (4) Conclusions: Mathematical conversion of female to male creatinine concentrations identified disadvantages in liver transplantation prioritization for females and ascertained MELD 3.0 as having high potential to compensate for these inequalities.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Medicine (miscellaneous)

Reference27 articles.

1. Current status of liver transplantation in Europe;Kabacam;Int. J. Surg.,2020

2. Adult Liver Allocation in Eurotransplant;Jochmans;Transplantation,2017

3. Model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) and allocation of donor livers;Wiesner;Gastroenterology,2003

4. Age- and sex-specific reference limits for creatinine, cystatin C and the estimated glomerular filtration rate;Hannemann;Clin. Chem. Lab. Med.,2011

5. Reduced Access to Liver Transplantation in Women: Role of Height, MELD Exception Scores, and Renal Function Underestimation;Allen;Transplantation,2018

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