Oden-Brunson Hannah, McDonald Malcolm F, Godfrey Elizabeth, Keeling Stephanie S, Cholankeril George, Kanwal Fasiha, O'Mahony Christine, Goss John, Rana Abbas
Department of Student Affairs, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX.
Medical Scientist Training Program, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX.
Transplantation. 2023 Mar 1;107(3):680-692. doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000004345. Epub 2022 Oct 20.
Assessing the survival benefit of transplantation in patients with end-stage liver disease is critical in guiding the decision-making process for liver allocation. Previous studies established increased mortality risk for those transplanted below Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) 18 compared with candidates who remained on the waitlist; however, improved outcomes of liver transplantation and a changing landscape in the donor supply warrant re-evaluation of this idea.
Using the United Network for Organ Sharing database, we analyzed 160 290 candidates who were waitlisted for liver transplantation within MELD cohorts. We compared patients who were transplanted in a MELD cohort with those listed but not transplanted in that listed MELD cohort with an intent-to-treat analysis.
Those transplanted at a MELD between 6 and 11 showed a 31% reduction in adjusted mortality (HR = 0.69 [95% confidence interval [CI], 0.66-0.75]; P < 0.001) compared with the intent-to-treat cohort in a Cox multivariate regression. This mortality benefit increased to a 37% adjusted reduction for those transplanted at MELD between 12 and 14 (HR = 0.63 [95% CI, 0.60-0.66]; P < 0.001) and a 46% adjusted reduction for those transplanted at a MELD between 15 and 17 (HR = 0.54 [95% CI, 0.52-0.57]; P < 0.001), effects that remained in sensitivity analyses excluding patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, encephalopathy, ascites, and variceal bleeds. A multivariate analysis of patients transplanted at MELD < 18 found younger age and cold ischemia time were protective, whereas older age, lower functional status, and socioeconomic factors increased mortality risk.
These findings challenge the current practice of deferring liver transplants below a particular MELD score by demonstrating survival benefits for most transplant patients at the lowest MELD scores and providing insight into who benefits within these subgroups.
评估终末期肝病患者移植的生存获益对于指导肝脏分配的决策过程至关重要。既往研究表明,与仍在等待名单上的候选人相比,终末期肝病模型(MELD)评分低于18分的患者移植后死亡风险增加;然而,肝移植效果的改善以及供体供应情况的变化使得有必要重新评估这一观点。
利用器官共享联合网络数据库,我们分析了MELD队列中160290名等待肝移植的候选人。我们采用意向性分析,比较了在某个MELD队列中接受移植的患者与在该MELD队列中登记但未接受移植的患者。
在Cox多变量回归中,与意向性分析队列相比,MELD评分在6至11分之间接受移植的患者调整后死亡率降低了31%(风险比[HR]=0.69[95%置信区间[CI],0.66 - 0.75];P<0.001)。对于MELD评分在12至14分之间接受移植的患者,这种死亡获益增加到调整后降低37%(HR = 0.63[95%CI,0.60 - 0.66];P<0.001),而对于MELD评分在15至17分之间接受移植的患者,调整后降低46%(HR = 0.54[95%CI,0.52 - 0.57];P<0.001),在排除肝细胞癌、肝性脑病、腹水和静脉曲张出血患者的敏感性分析中,这些效应仍然存在。对MELD<18分接受移植的患者进行多变量分析发现,年龄较小和冷缺血时间具有保护作用,而年龄较大、功能状态较低和社会经济因素会增加死亡风险。
这些发现对目前推迟特定MELD评分以下肝移植的做法提出了挑战,因为它们证明了大多数最低MELD评分的移植患者具有生存获益,并深入了解了这些亚组中哪些患者能从中受益。