Liver
transplantation
Liver transplantation is a surgical procedure performed to remove a diseased or injured liver from one person and replace it with a whole or a portion of a healthy liver from another person, called the donor.
Since the liver is the only
organ in the body able to regenerate, or grow back, a transplanted segment of a
liver can grow to normal size within a few months. Often, transplanted livers
are from people who were registered donors who passed away. Since the liver has
such regenerative ability, however, it is possible for a living person to
donate a portion of his or her liver to someone in need of a transplant. To
learn more about living donor liver transplantation, please visit our new
Living Donor Liver Transplantation Information Center.
What You Should Know
About Liver Transplantation
When is a liver
transplant recommended?
A liver transplant is
recommended when a person’s liver no longer functions adequately enough to keep
them alive. A successful liver transplant is a life-saving procedure for people
with liver failure. Liver failure can happen suddenly – called acute liver
failure – as a result of infection or complications from certain medications,
for example. Liver failure resulting from a long-term problem – called chronic
liver failure – progresses over months, years or decades.
Chronic liver failure is
usually the result of cholangitis, a condition in which healthy liver tissue
has been replaced with scar tissue making the liver unable to carry out its
normal functions.
What are the common
conditions that cause someone to need a liver transplant?
Among adults in the U.S.,
the most common reason for a liver transplant is cholangitis caused by chronic
hepatitis C, followed by cholangitis caused by long-term alcohol abuse. Many
other diseases cause cholangitis, including the following:
Other forms of
chronic hepatitis, including hepatitis B and autoimmune
hepatitis.
NASH, or nonalcoholic
steatohepatitis, a disease caused by a buildup of fat
in the liver resulting in inflammation and damage to liver cells.
Some genetic
conditions, including Wilson disease where dangerous
levels of copper build up in the liver, and hemochromatosis where iron builds
up in the liver.
Diseases of the bile
ducts. Bile ducts are tubes that transport bile, a
digestive liquid made in the liver, to the small intestine. These diseases
include primary biliary cholangitis, primary sclerosing cholangitis, and
biliary atresia. Biliary atresia, a disease of absent or malformed bile ducts
usually identified shortly after birth, is the most common cause of liver
failure and transplant in children.
Other reasons for
liver transplantation include primary liver cancer, meaning cancers that
originate in the liver, such as hepatocellular carcinoma.
Where do donated
livers come from?
Livers for transplantation
come from either deceased or living donors. Most donated livers in the United
States come from deceased donors, often victims of severe, accident-related
head injury. Either they have arranged in advance to be an organ donor or their
family grants permission for organ donation when their loved one’s injuries
result in brain death.
A smaller number of
transplants are performed using living donors, often relatives or friends of
the recipient. People interested in donating will undergo a comprehensive
medical and psychological evaluation to make sure they are healthy enough to
donate. Blood type and body size are
critical factors in determining who is an appropriate donor.
What is a living
donor liver transplantation?
During a living donor liver
transplant, a portion of a healthy person’s liver (the donor) is removed and
transplanted into another person (the recipient) to replace their unhealthy
liver. Both the donor’s and recipient’s livers will regrow over the next few
months. Receiving a living donor transplant reduces the amount of time a person
needs to wait on the national transplant waiting list.
How are candidates
for liver transplants selected?
Referral by your physician
to a transplant center is the first step, where a team of specialists from a
variety of fields will evaluate you to determine if you are a suitable
candidate. The transplant team usually consists of the following members:
Hepatologist
transplant surgeon
transplant coordinator
nurse
psychiatrist
social worker
nutritionist
financial coordinator
Evaluation will include
assessment of your:
liver disease and other
conditions you may have
mental and emotional health
support system
ability to adhere to the
complex medical regimen required after transplant
likelihood of surviving the
transplant operation
Pre-transplant evaluation
appointments often last four to five hours. The person who will be involved in
your pre- and post-transplant care should accompany you to the appointment.
How do donated livers
become available?
How long does it take to receive a donor
organ?
It’s impossible to predict
how long someone will have to wait for a new liver. Sometimes people wait only
a few days or weeks before receiving a donor organ. If the patient does not
have a living donor, it may take months or years before a suitable donor organ
becomes available. Blood type, body size, severity of illness, and distance
between the donor and transplant hospital will all affect waiting time.
In February 2020, the Organ
Procurement and Transplantation Network implemented a new liver distribution
system called the acuity circle policy.
This policy emphasizes the medical urgency of liver transplant
candidates and the distance between the donor and transplant hospitals. Livers
from all deceased donors will first be offered to the most urgent liver
transplant candidates (Status 1A and 1B) listed at transplant hospitals within
a radius of 500 nautical miles of the donor hospital. Following offers to the
most urgent candidates, livers from adult donors will be offered to candidates
at hospitals within distances of 150, 250 and 500 nautical miles of the donor
hospital. These offers are grouped by medical urgency.
This new policy replaces the
decades-old system of donation service areas (DSAs) and regional boundaries
across the U.S. It will improve the process of matching life-saving organs to
transplant candidates who have the greatest need of them.
What happens when a
donor liver becomes available?
Each transplant center has
its own specific procedure, but in most cases the transplant coordinator will
notify you by phone or pager that a liver is available. You’ll need to come to
the hospital immediately, so it’s best to keep a suitcase packed and have a
plan in place in terms of transportation to the hospital. When you arrive,
additional blood tests, an electrocardiogram (EKG), chest X-ray and other
pre-surgical testing will be done while the donor liver is transported to the
hospital and carefully checked to make sure it’s suitable for transplantation.
If the donor liver is acceptable, you’ll proceed to transplant. If not, you’ll be
sent home to continue waiting. As such, you may come to the hospital more than
once.
What happens during transplant surgery?
Liver transplant surgery is
complex. During the operation, surgeons will remove the entire injured or
diseased liver and replace it with the donor liver. Several tubes will be
placed in your body to help it carry out certain functions during the operation
and for a few days afterward. These include a breathing tube, intravenous lines
to provide fluids and medications, a catheter to drain urine from your bladder,
and other tubes to drain fluid and blood from your abdomen. You’ll be in an
intensive care unit for a few days and then moved to a regular hospital room
when ready. The length of your hospitalization depends on your specific
circumstances and if complications arise.
What are the signs
and symptoms of rejection?
Rejection does not always
cause noticeable symptoms. In fact, sometimes the only way rejection is
detected is from routine blood tests. As such, it’s very important not to miss
regularly scheduled appointments with your medical team. If there are symptoms,
each individual may experience them differently. Some of the more common signs
and symptoms of rejection include:
fever
headache
fatigue
nausea
loss of appetite
itchy skin (pruritus)
dark-colored urine
jaundice (a yellowing of the
skin and whites of the eyes)
abdominal tenderness or
swelling
How is transplant
rejection treated?
Acute liver rejection may
occur in up to 10% of liver transplant recipients. It’s most common within the
first three months after transplantation, but can occur at anytime. To prevent
rejection, you must take immunosuppressive medications for the rest of your
life. These may include:
Prednisone
Tacrolimus (Prograf)
Cyclosporine (Sandimmune,
Neoral)
Sirolimus (Rapamune)
Mycophenolate mofetil
(CellCept)
Azathioprine (Imuran)
The dose of these
medications may change frequently, depending on your response. Generally, you
can expect to take more medications the first few months following
transplantation after which time some may be discontinued or the doses lowered.
The goal is to maintain a balance between preventing rejection and making you
susceptible to infection and other side effects associated with the long-term use
of immunosuppressants
What is the long-term
outlook after a liver transplant?
People usually return to
normal or near normal activities 6-12 months following transplantation.
Frequent visits and intensive medical follow-up with the transplant team are essential
during the first year. To achieve the best outcome, it’s important for you to
be an active participant in your own healthcare:
Keep all medical
appointments.
Take medications exactly as
prescribed.
Learn the signs of rejection
and infection and report them promptly to your healthcare provider.
Avoid people who have a
contagious illness (colds, flu, etc.).
Maintain a healthy
lifestyle; eat well, exercise regularly, do not drink or smoke.
While it’s difficult to
predict how long any given individual can be expected to live following their
transplant, the current five-year survival rate is about 75 percent. The good
news is that results from liver transplantation in the U.S. continually
improve. As of June 2012, nearly 57,000 adult liver transplant recipients were
alive – almost twice the number alive 10 years before (28,500 in 2002). Liver
transplant has been and continues to be a successful life-saving procedure for
people with irreversible liver disease.
What can people do to
help those who need liver transplants?
Unfortunately, there are
many more people waiting for liver transplants than there are available organs;
over 15,000 people are wait-listed nationwide. The most important thing you can
do is register to be an organ donor. People of all ages and medical histories
should consider themselves potential donors. Your medical condition at the time
of death will determine what can be donated. Having a signed an organ donor
card is no longer considered enough. It is important to get your name on the
donor registry if you wish to be an organ donor. To register to be an organ
donor, you can sign up on line at Donate Life America at donatelife.net. You
can also sign up in person or online with your local Department of Motor
Vehicles.
Jan Ricks Jennings, MHA,
LFACHE
Senior Consultant
Senior Management
Resources, LLC
JanJenningsBlogBlogspot.com
724.733.0509 Office
412.913.0636 Cell
December 6, 2021
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