Liver Transplantation in Elderly Recipients: Is Age Just a Number?

Author:

Kurian Joshua1,Matevish Lauren E.1ORCID,Feizpour Cyrus12,Shah Jigesh A.1,Hwang Christine1,Hanish Steven I.1,Mufti Arjmand R.3,Neill-Fogus Susan1,Vagefi Parsia A.1,Patel Madhukar S.1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Surgical Transplantation, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA

2. Department of Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, USA

3. Division of Digestive and Liver Diseases, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA

Abstract

Background The proportion of older patients on the liver transplant waitlist continues to increase. With limited existing data to guide liver transplant evaluation of elderly patients, we aimed to study selection practices and outcomes of patients ≥70 years old. We hypothesized that 1-year patient and graft survival would not differ between appropriately selected elderly patients and those who are younger. Methods All patients referred for liver transplantation between 2018 and 2020 were stratified into elderly (age ≥70) and young (age <70) cohorts. Evaluation data pertaining to medical, surgical, and psychosocial risk assessment were reviewed. Recipient characteristics and post-operative outcomes, primarily 1-year graft and patient survival, were compared, with a median follow-up of 16.4 months. Results 322 patients underwent transplant out of 2331 referred. Elderly patients represented 230 of these referrals and 20 underwent transplant. The most common reasons for denial of elderly patients were multiple medical comorbidities (49%), cardiac risk (15%) and psychosocial barriers (13%). The median MELD of elderly recipients was lower (19 vs 24, P = .02), and proportion of hepatocellular carcinoma was higher (60% vs 23%, P < .001). There was no difference in 1-year graft (elderly 90.9% vs young 93.3%, P = .72) or patient survival (elderly 90.9% vs young 94.7%, P = .88). Discussion Liver transplant outcomes and survival are not affected by advanced age in carefully evaluated and selected recipients. Age should not be considered an absolute contraindication for liver transplant referral. Efforts should be made to develop guidelines for risk stratification and donor–recipient matching that optimize outcomes in elderly patients.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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