Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4259367 Transplantation Proceedings 2007 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundSplit liver transplantation (SLT) has become a crucial option to maximize the liver pool, while organ procurement organizations (OPOs) usually allocate whole livers to single centers. In 2003, Italian Ministry of Health funded the Innovative Strategies to Expand Cadaveric Donor Pool for Liver Transplantation project with the goal to establish sharing criteria for SLT for two adults (SLT A/A), involving Italian transplantation centers, the North Italy Transplant OPO, and the Italian National Transplant Center.MethodsSITF group defined donor/recipient inclusion criteria, setting minimum graft/recipient weight ratio (GRWR) at 1.2%. Donors and recipients on waiting list were shared on an Internet secured Web-based application (Split Liver Network [SLN]). SLN performs real-time matches between the registered donor and all patients on the bases of GRWR, displaying a size-based list of matched donor/patients, figuring hemiliver allocation once the whole organ is referred to a specific center.ResultsIn the 2005 period, 47 donors and 124 patients were entered by nine centers, and six hemiliver allocations for three SLT A/A procedures were performed. By retrospective simulation of 32 donors and 613 recipients in the Nord Italia Transplant area, matchable recipients were available for all donors, while blood group frequency seemed a determining factor, more than donor body weight.CommentsSLN hemiliver allocation might increase matching possibilities, offering a timely transplant for recipients of rare group, small-size, or in need of short wait. Our experience suggests that such an environment may be helpful to share a macroregional pool of liver recipients and to optimize SLT.

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