Background.
Critically ill cirrhotic patients are increasingly transplanted, but there is no consensus about futile liver transplantation (LT). Therefore, the decision to delay or deny LT is often extensively debated. These debates arise from different opinions of futility among transplant team members. This study aims to achieve a multinational and multidisciplinary consensus on the definition of futility in LT and to develop well-articulated criteria for not proceeding with LT due to futility.
Methods.
Thirty-five international experts from anesthesiology/intensive care, hepatology, and transplant surgery were surveyed using the Delphi method. More than 70% of similar answers to a question were necessary to define agreement.
Results.
The panel recommended patient and graft survival at 1 year after LT to define futility. Severe frailty and persistent fever or <72 hours of appropriate antimicrobial therapy in case of ongoing sepsis were considered reasons to delay LT. A simple assessment of the number of organs failing was considered the most appropriate way to decide whether LT should be delayed or denied, with respiratory, circulatory and metabolic failures having the most influence in this decision. The thresholds of severity of organ failures contraindicating LT for which a consensus was achieved were a Pao
2/FiO2 ratio<150 mm Hg, a norepinephrine dose >1 μg/kg per minute and a serum lactate level >9 mmol/L.
Conclusions.
Our expert panel provides a consensus on the definition of futile LT and on specific criteria for postponing or denying LT. A framework that may facilitate the decision if a patient is too sick for transplant is presented.
This study of all patients undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) at our center between January 1997 and December 1999 evaluated the feasibility and safety of very early tracheal extubation without previous selection. Anesthetic management was the same in all cases, and tracheal extubation was performed on the basis of standardized criteria routinely adopted in operating rooms throughout the world, i.e., no residual curarization or anesthetic action, ability to swallow efficiently, and stable hemodynamics. One hundred sixty-nine patients underwent 181 OLTs during the study period. Tracheal extubation was performed within 3 hours of surgery in 115 cases, 8 hours in 19 cases, and 8 to 24 hours in 10 cases. In 36 cases, artificial ventilation was required for more than 24 hours or weaning was not possible. One patient died of primary graft nonfunction within 24 hours and was excluded from the analysis. The feasibility of early extubation was influenced by the amount of intraoperative transfused blood; efficacy of kidney, cardiac, and pulmonary function; and presence of encephalopathy (P < .001). No correlation was found with age or pre-OLT severity of hepatic disease, and the postoperative period was not compromised by early weaning. Very early extubation was feasible and safe in a large number of unselected transplant recipients, thus suggesting that the definition of early tracheal extubation should be changed from 8 to 3 hours after surgery. (Liver Transpl 2001;7: 777-782.)
recent data demonstrated that amongst patients undergoing elective surgery the prevalence of cirrhosis is 0.8% equating to approximately 25 million cirrhotic patients undergoing surgery each year worldwide. overall, the presence of cirrhosis is independently associated with 47% increased risk of postoperative complications and over two and a half-increased risk of in-hospital mortality in patients undergoing elective surgery. in particular, perioperative patients with chronic liver disease have long been assumed to have a major bleeding risk on the basis of abnormal results for standard tests of hemostasis. However, recent evidence outlined significant changes to traditional knowledge and beliefs and, nowadays, with more sophisticated laboratory tests, it has been shown that patients with chronic liver disease may be in hemostatic balance as a result of concomitant changes in both pro-and antihemostatic pathways. the aim of this paper endorsed by the liver intensive care group of europe was to provide an up-to-date overview of coagulation management in perioperative patients with chronic liver disease focusing on patient blood management, monitoring of hemostasis, and current role of hemostatic agents.
BACKGROUND:Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) is a multimodal, evidence-based, program of care developed to minimize the response to surgical stress, associated with reduced perioperative morbidity and hospital stay. This study presents the specific ERAS Society recommendations for liver transplantation (LT) based on the best available evidence and on expert consensus METHODS:
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