Background: Splenectomy is a surgical procedure indicated in a variety of medical conditions including trauma. Postoperatively, there is a lifelong risk of developing overwhelming sepsis from encapsulated bacteria, most commonly due to Streptococcus pneumoniae. Splenic autotransplantation has been proposed as a method to recover splenic function in patients requiring splenectomy with otherwise normal spleens. This paper aims to systematically review the literature to determine the efficacy of spleen autotransplantation.Methods: MEDLINE, PubMed and the Cochrane Library were searched for all studies assessing splenic autotransplantation (January 1947 to July 2018). Data was extracted on study characteristics, outcomes assessed, including spleen scintigraphy results, blood film counts and serum immunoglobulin levels.Results: Data was obtained from 18 primary studies. All papers demonstrated return of regenerated spleen tissue in the majority of their patients (95.3%) on spleen scintigraphy. 90.2% of patients in 12 studies had blood films return to normal following transplantation. Immunoglobulin levels were shown to return to normal in all 12 studies where it was assessed. 3.7% of patients in 11 studies had postoperative complications.1.3% of patients in five studies had postoperative infections in the follow-up period.