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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Nov 2010
Transfusion has no effect on recurrence in hepatitis C after liver transplantation.
- M J Rice, A Wendling, R J Firpi, A W Hemming, D R Nelson, W K Schwab, N Gravenstein, and T E Morey.
- Department of Anesthesiology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, USA. mrice@anest.ufl.edu
- Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 2010 Nov 1; 54 (10): 1224-32.
BackgroundThe literature suggests that blood product transfusions have a negative impact on the survival of liver transplant patients. We investigated the impact of intraoperative blood product usage on the survival of liver transplantation patients being transplanted for hepatitis C-related end-stage liver disease. In addition, we analyzed a potentially more sensitive metric, namely disease recurrence and fibrosis progression, obtained from follow-up liver biopsies.MethodsWe retrospectively studied 194 consecutive patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) undergoing liver transplantation. To investigate the effect of red blood cell (RBC) or platelet transfusions on post-transplant HCV recurrence, hepatic biopsy data from 4 months and 1 year after transplantation were studied. In addition, survival data were analyzed.ResultsThere was no effect of intraoperative RBC or platelet transfusion on either 1- or 5-year patient survival following liver transplantation. There was no difference in HCV disease recurrence or progression of hepatic fibrosis at 4 months or 1 year attributable either to RBC or to platelet transfusion.ConclusionThis study was not able to confirm an effect on the survival of HCV-infected liver transplant patients related to intraoperative transfusion of RBCs or platelets. In addition, these transfusions had no effect on HCV recurrence or fibrosis progression. This is not to condone a liberal transfusion practice, but rather to reassure that when clinically indicated, transfusion does not have a significant impact on patient survival or disease recurrence in HCV-infected liver transplant patients.
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