Division of Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System and University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Gastroenterology. 2016 Feb;150(2):441-53.e6; quiz e16. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2015.10.043. Epub 2015 Oct 30.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Epidemiologic factors have generated increased demand for liver transplantation among older patients. We aimed to describe trends in age among liver transplant registrants and recipients and the effect of age on waitlist and post-transplantation outcomes and on transplant-related survival benefit.
We obtained data from the United Network for Organ Sharing on adults who were listed for liver transplantation (N = 122,606) or underwent liver transplantation (N = 60,820) from 2002 to 2014 in the United States. Competing risks analysis was used to model waitlist outcomes and Cox proportional hazards analysis to model post-transplantation survival. These models were also used to estimate 5-year transplant-related survival benefit for different age groups, calculated as the difference between waitlist and post-transplantation life expectancy.
Between 2002 and 2014, the mean age of liver transplant registrants increased from 51.2 to 55.7 years, with a more prominent increase in hepatitis C virus-positive (50.9-57.9 years) than hepatitis C virus-negative (51.3-54.3 years) registrants. The proportion of registrants aged ≥60 years increased from 19% to 41%. In hepatitis C virus-negative patients, aging trends were driven by increasing proportions of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma or nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. Among transplant registrants, increasing age was associated with increasing mortality before transplantation and decreasing likelihood of transplantation. Among transplant recipients, increasing age was associated with increasing post-transplantation mortality. There was little difference in 5-year transplant-related survival benefit between different age groups who had the same Model for End-Stage Liver Disease score.
Dramatic aging of liver transplant registrants and recipients occurred from 2002 to 2014, driven by aging of the hepatitis C virus-positive cohort and increased prevalence of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Increasing age does not affect transplant-related survival benefit substantially because age diminishes both post-transplantation survival and waitlist survival approximately equally.
流行病学因素导致老年患者对肝移植的需求增加。本研究旨在描述肝移植登记患者和受者的年龄趋势,并评估年龄对等候名单和移植后结局以及移植相关生存获益的影响。
我们从美国器官共享联合网络获取了 2002 年至 2014 年间登记接受肝移植(N=122606)或接受肝移植(N=60820)的成年人的数据。使用竞争风险分析模型来构建等候名单结局,使用 Cox 比例风险分析模型来构建移植后生存模型。我们还使用这些模型来估计不同年龄组的 5 年移植相关生存获益,其计算方法为等候名单和移植后预期寿命之间的差异。
2002 年至 2014 年间,肝移植登记患者的平均年龄从 51.2 岁增加到 55.7 岁,丙型肝炎病毒阳性(50.9-57.9 岁)患者的增幅明显高于丙型肝炎病毒阴性(51.3-54.3 岁)患者。年龄≥60 岁的登记患者比例从 19%增加到 41%。在丙型肝炎病毒阴性患者中,年龄增长趋势主要是由于肝细胞癌或非酒精性脂肪性肝炎患者比例增加所致。在肝移植登记患者中,年龄增长与移植前死亡率增加和移植可能性降低有关。在肝移植受者中,年龄增长与移植后死亡率增加有关。在具有相同终末期肝病模型评分的不同年龄组中,5 年移植相关生存获益差异不大。
2002 年至 2014 年间,肝移植登记患者和受者的年龄明显增长,这主要是由于丙型肝炎病毒阳性患者的老龄化以及非酒精性脂肪性肝炎和肝细胞癌的发病率增加所致。年龄增长不会显著影响移植相关生存获益,因为年龄对移植后生存和等候名单生存的影响大致相当。