Liver transplantation for hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia: Report of the European liver transplant registry.

Standard

Liver transplantation for hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia: Report of the European liver transplant registry. / Lerut, Jan; Orlando, Giuseppe; Adam, René; Sabbà, Carlo; Pfitzmann, Robert; Klempnauer, Jurgen; Belghiti, Jacques; Pirenne, Jacques; Thevenot, Thierry; Hillert, Christian; Brown, Colin M; Gonze, Dominique; Karam, Vincent; Boillot, Olivier.

In: ANN SURG, Vol. 244, No. 6, 6, 2006, p. 854-854.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lerut, J, Orlando, G, Adam, R, Sabbà, C, Pfitzmann, R, Klempnauer, J, Belghiti, J, Pirenne, J, Thevenot, T, Hillert, C, Brown, CM, Gonze, D, Karam, V & Boillot, O 2006, 'Liver transplantation for hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia: Report of the European liver transplant registry.', ANN SURG, vol. 244, no. 6, 6, pp. 854-854. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17122610?dopt=Citation>

APA

Lerut, J., Orlando, G., Adam, R., Sabbà, C., Pfitzmann, R., Klempnauer, J., Belghiti, J., Pirenne, J., Thevenot, T., Hillert, C., Brown, C. M., Gonze, D., Karam, V., & Boillot, O. (2006). Liver transplantation for hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia: Report of the European liver transplant registry. ANN SURG, 244(6), 854-854. [6]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17122610?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Lerut J, Orlando G, Adam R, Sabbà C, Pfitzmann R, Klempnauer J et al. Liver transplantation for hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia: Report of the European liver transplant registry. ANN SURG. 2006;244(6):854-854. 6.

Bibtex

@article{1d35343bffd7499fa8841db19dabfb62,
title = "Liver transplantation for hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia: Report of the European liver transplant registry.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) or Rendu-Osler-Weber disease is a rare disease characterized by the presence of arteriovenous malformations. Hepatic involvement can lead to life-threatening conditions. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Forty patients, reported to the European Liver Transplant Registry, were analyzed to define the role of liver transplantation in the treatment of the hepatic disease form. Indications for transplantation were classified according to Garcia-Tsao: cardiac failure (14 patients), biliary necrosis causing hepatic failure (12 patients), severe portal hypertension (5 patients), cardiac failure and biliary necrosis (6 patients), cardiac failure and portal hypertension (2 patients), and cardiac failure associated with biliary necrosis and portal hypertension (1 patient). Eighteen (81%) of 22 patients had pulmonary artery hypertension. Twelve (30%) patients had pretransplant hepatic interventions. Follow-up was complete for all patients with a mean of 69 months (range, 0-230 months). RESULTS: One-, 5- and 10-year actuarial patient and graft survival rates are 82.5%. Six of the 7 pretransplant procedures performed on the hepatic artery were severely complicated. Cardiovascular function documented in 24 patients improved in 18 patients and remained stable in 5 patients; 1 patient died perioperatively of acute heart failure. Twenty-four (60%) patients had post-transplant complications, all but one occurring within the first 4 posttransplant months. Seven (17.5%) patients died perioperatively, 6 of them due to bleeding and 1 due to cardiac failure; 1 (2.5%) patient died late due to chronic rejection. There were 2 possible recurrences. Quality of life markedly improved in all 32 surviving patients. CONCLUSION: The results of the largest reported transplant series in the treatment of hepatic-based HHT are excellent. Elimination of hepatobiliary sepsis and reversal of cardiopulmonary changes dramatically improve quality of life of the recipients. LT should be proposed earlier in the course of symptomatic hepatic HHT presenting with life-threatening conditions. Palliative interventions, especially on the hepatic artery, should be avoided in view of their high (infectious) complication rate.",
author = "Jan Lerut and Giuseppe Orlando and Ren{\'e} Adam and Carlo Sabb{\`a} and Robert Pfitzmann and Jurgen Klempnauer and Jacques Belghiti and Jacques Pirenne and Thierry Thevenot and Christian Hillert and Brown, {Colin M} and Dominique Gonze and Vincent Karam and Olivier Boillot",
year = "2006",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "244",
pages = "854--854",
journal = "ANN SURG",
issn = "0003-4932",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams and Wilkins",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Liver transplantation for hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia: Report of the European liver transplant registry.

AU - Lerut, Jan

AU - Orlando, Giuseppe

AU - Adam, René

AU - Sabbà, Carlo

AU - Pfitzmann, Robert

AU - Klempnauer, Jurgen

AU - Belghiti, Jacques

AU - Pirenne, Jacques

AU - Thevenot, Thierry

AU - Hillert, Christian

AU - Brown, Colin M

AU - Gonze, Dominique

AU - Karam, Vincent

AU - Boillot, Olivier

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - BACKGROUND: Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) or Rendu-Osler-Weber disease is a rare disease characterized by the presence of arteriovenous malformations. Hepatic involvement can lead to life-threatening conditions. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Forty patients, reported to the European Liver Transplant Registry, were analyzed to define the role of liver transplantation in the treatment of the hepatic disease form. Indications for transplantation were classified according to Garcia-Tsao: cardiac failure (14 patients), biliary necrosis causing hepatic failure (12 patients), severe portal hypertension (5 patients), cardiac failure and biliary necrosis (6 patients), cardiac failure and portal hypertension (2 patients), and cardiac failure associated with biliary necrosis and portal hypertension (1 patient). Eighteen (81%) of 22 patients had pulmonary artery hypertension. Twelve (30%) patients had pretransplant hepatic interventions. Follow-up was complete for all patients with a mean of 69 months (range, 0-230 months). RESULTS: One-, 5- and 10-year actuarial patient and graft survival rates are 82.5%. Six of the 7 pretransplant procedures performed on the hepatic artery were severely complicated. Cardiovascular function documented in 24 patients improved in 18 patients and remained stable in 5 patients; 1 patient died perioperatively of acute heart failure. Twenty-four (60%) patients had post-transplant complications, all but one occurring within the first 4 posttransplant months. Seven (17.5%) patients died perioperatively, 6 of them due to bleeding and 1 due to cardiac failure; 1 (2.5%) patient died late due to chronic rejection. There were 2 possible recurrences. Quality of life markedly improved in all 32 surviving patients. CONCLUSION: The results of the largest reported transplant series in the treatment of hepatic-based HHT are excellent. Elimination of hepatobiliary sepsis and reversal of cardiopulmonary changes dramatically improve quality of life of the recipients. LT should be proposed earlier in the course of symptomatic hepatic HHT presenting with life-threatening conditions. Palliative interventions, especially on the hepatic artery, should be avoided in view of their high (infectious) complication rate.

AB - BACKGROUND: Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) or Rendu-Osler-Weber disease is a rare disease characterized by the presence of arteriovenous malformations. Hepatic involvement can lead to life-threatening conditions. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Forty patients, reported to the European Liver Transplant Registry, were analyzed to define the role of liver transplantation in the treatment of the hepatic disease form. Indications for transplantation were classified according to Garcia-Tsao: cardiac failure (14 patients), biliary necrosis causing hepatic failure (12 patients), severe portal hypertension (5 patients), cardiac failure and biliary necrosis (6 patients), cardiac failure and portal hypertension (2 patients), and cardiac failure associated with biliary necrosis and portal hypertension (1 patient). Eighteen (81%) of 22 patients had pulmonary artery hypertension. Twelve (30%) patients had pretransplant hepatic interventions. Follow-up was complete for all patients with a mean of 69 months (range, 0-230 months). RESULTS: One-, 5- and 10-year actuarial patient and graft survival rates are 82.5%. Six of the 7 pretransplant procedures performed on the hepatic artery were severely complicated. Cardiovascular function documented in 24 patients improved in 18 patients and remained stable in 5 patients; 1 patient died perioperatively of acute heart failure. Twenty-four (60%) patients had post-transplant complications, all but one occurring within the first 4 posttransplant months. Seven (17.5%) patients died perioperatively, 6 of them due to bleeding and 1 due to cardiac failure; 1 (2.5%) patient died late due to chronic rejection. There were 2 possible recurrences. Quality of life markedly improved in all 32 surviving patients. CONCLUSION: The results of the largest reported transplant series in the treatment of hepatic-based HHT are excellent. Elimination of hepatobiliary sepsis and reversal of cardiopulmonary changes dramatically improve quality of life of the recipients. LT should be proposed earlier in the course of symptomatic hepatic HHT presenting with life-threatening conditions. Palliative interventions, especially on the hepatic artery, should be avoided in view of their high (infectious) complication rate.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 244

SP - 854

EP - 854

JO - ANN SURG

JF - ANN SURG

SN - 0003-4932

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -