Does Matching Donor-Recipient Age Affect Long-Term Survival in Liver Transplantation?

ANNALS OF TRANSPLANTATION(2016)

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摘要
Background: The characteristics of liver donors have changed over the last decade owing to the shortage of organs and high mortality on the waiting list, leading to wider use of extended-criteria donors, including older donors. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of matching donor-recipient age on morbidity at 1 year post-transplant and on long-term patient and graft survival. Material/Methods: Retrospective study from a prospectively-obtained database including adult patients who had received a primary liver transplant (LT) from whole graft of brain-dead donors. Recipients were divided into 2 age groups: < 60 years and 3 >= 60 years. Both groups were sub-divided according to donor age (younger than 60 years and 60 years or older). A propensity score analysis was performed to further adjust for baseline differences between recipients and donors. Results: We analyzed 642 patients who had LT performed between January 2000 and December 2013. No differences were observed in 1-year morbidity (hospital stay, rejection, surgical complications, and retransplant) between groups. Although patient and graft survival was significantly impaired in the older donor/older recipient group on Kaplan-Meier analysis (p=0.004), the propensity score analysis showed that donor age 3 60 years did not increase the risk of death for recipients aged 3 60 (HR1.40, p 0.074) and < 60 years (HR 1.47, p 0.070). Conclusions: Older donor age did not negatively affect survival regardless of recipient age, and comparable outcomes were achieved without an increased rate of complications.
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关键词
Liver Transplantation,Morbidity,Mortality
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