Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5729157 Transplantation Proceedings 2016 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Patients who developed severe sepsis after LDLT had poor long-term survival.•Few have analyzed the risk factors with respect to the severity of sepsis after LDLT.•A risk factor for severe sepsis was a low pre-operative lymphocyte count (<850/μL).•The lung was the most frequent site of infections that led to severe sepsis.

BackgroundThe post-operative mortality and morbidity rates associated with living-donor liver transplantation (LDLT) are still relatively high. Several papers have reported the risk factors associated with post-operative infectious complications, but few have analyzed the risk factors with respect to the severity of sepsis. The aim of this study was to clarify the risk factors that affect severe sepsis after LDLT.MethodsFor 63 LDLT patients at our institute, we compared peri-operative characteristics in 29 patients who developed sepsis after surgery and 34 patients who did not. The sepsis group was further divided into severe sepsis (n = 16) and sepsis (n = 13) subgroups to identify significant peri-operative risk factors.ResultsMultivariate analysis identified 3 significant risk factors for post-operative sepsis after LDLT: ABO incompatibility (P = .015), low estimated glomerular filtration rates (<90 mL/min/1.73 m2; P = .074), and low peripheral lymphocyte counts (<850/μL; P = .008). Multivariate analysis showed that the only significant risk factor for severe sepsis was a low pre-operative lymphocyte count (<850/μL; P = .01). In the 2 sepsis subgroups, the 5- and 10-year survival rates for the severe sepsis subgroup (37.5% and 37.5%) were significantly lower than for the sepsis subgroup (83.3% and 62.5%; P = .05). The lung was the most common site of severe sepsis (n = 8; 50.0%).ConclusionsPatients who developed severe sepsis after LDLT had poor long-term survival, with pre-operative lymphocyte counts <850/μL being the significant risk factor. Pre-operative nutritional intervention and rehabilitation should be considered to improve LDLT outcomes.

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