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Lose Weight to Donate: Development of a Program to Optimize Potential Donors With Hepatic Steatosis or Obesity for Living Liver Donation

Rose, John T; Vargas, Paola; Seay, Tara; Pesch, Arthur J; Williams, Tessa; Sites, Anita; Henry, Zachary; Northup, Patrick G; Pelletier, Shawn J; Oberholzer, Jose; Argo, Curtis K; Goldaracena, Nicolas
Background/UNASSIGNED:Living donor liver transplantation offers an attractive option to reduce the waitlist mortality. However, in recent years, the rising prevalence of obesity and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease has posed a serious threat to the donor pool while simultaneously increasing demand for liver transplant. To our knowledge, there have been no major published studies in the United States documenting a diet and exercise intervention to expand the living donor pool. Hereby, we established a pilot program called "Lose Weight to Donate" and present our initial experience. Methods/UNASSIGNED:, hepatic steatosis >5% on screening MRI, or isolated hypertension. Results/UNASSIGNED:Over 19 mo, 7 individuals enrolled in the program of remote monitoring for at least 6-8 wk. Initial and follow-up abdominal MRI was performed in 5 of these individuals to assess steatosis, anatomy, and volume. Initial steatosis was highly variable (fat signal fraction range, 8%-26%). Follow-up MRI fat signal fraction values and hepatic volume all decreased to varying degrees. Ultimately, 2 of 7 individuals donated, whereas a third was approved, but the intended recipient was transplanted in the interim. Conclusions/UNASSIGNED:These results indicate the feasibility of a remotely monitored program to expand donation in light of the rising incidence of hepatic steatosis and obesity.
PMCID:8154492
PMID: 34056077
ISSN: 2373-8731
CID: 5168962

Vascular Liver Disorders, Portal Vein Thrombosis, and Procedural Bleeding in Patients With Liver Disease: 2020 Practice Guidance by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases

Northup, Patrick G; Garcia-Pagan, Juan Carlos; Garcia-Tsao, Guadalupe; Intagliata, Nicolas M; Superina, Riccardo A; Roberts, Lara N; Lisman, Ton; Valla, Dominique C
PMID: 33219529
ISSN: 1527-3350
CID: 5168902

Management of Portal Vein Thrombosis in Cirrhosis

Stotts, Matthew J; Wentworth, Brian J; Northup, Patrick G
While portal vein thrombosis (PVT) is a frequently encountered complication in the cirrhosis population, its management can be challenging for even the most experienced clinicians. Multiple factors must be considered with regards to management, including the degree of underlying portal hypertension and liver dysfunction, risks of therapies including anticoagulation and transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt placement, and extent of the thrombosis. Interpreting the available literature to determine the best treatment strategy for any individual patient can be especially challenging given the lack of prospective, randomized controlled trials and the heterogeneity of cohorts studied. This review will provide an overview of PVT in the cirrhosis population, including necessary steps in evaluation and the potential benefits and drawbacks of different treatment approaches.
PMID: 33764487
ISSN: 1098-8971
CID: 5168932

Direct-Acting Anticoagulants in Decompensated Cirrhosis: Preliminary Evidence? Reply [Letter]

Northup, Patrick G.
ISI:000689729600035
ISSN: 1542-3565
CID: 5169252

Author response to Letter to the Editor: 'AB0, von Willebrand factor/Factor VIII and portal vein thrombosis in decompensated cirrhosis: Too late to unmask the culprit?' [Comment]

Scheiner, Bernard; Northup, Patrick G; Lisman, Ton; Mandorfer, Mattias
PMID: 32367685
ISSN: 1478-3231
CID: 5168872

Macrosteatotic Allografts and Obese Recipients Have Nearly Equal Negative Impact on Liver Transplant Survival

Northup, Patrick G; Intagliata, Nicolas M; Davis, Jessica P E; Argo, Curtis K; Pelletier, Shawn J
BACKGROUND:Our aim was to evaluate liver transplant outcomes involving donors with high macrosteatosis grafts in the obese modern liver transplant recipient population. METHODS:A high-steatosis graft was defined as donor graft macrosteatosis ≥30% on biopsy. Recipient obesity was defined as body mass index (BMI) >35 adjusted for ascites. Raw and adjusted recipient liver transplant survival were evaluated and compared between 4 cohorts: (1) high-steatosis graft in high-BMI recipient; (2) low-steatosis graft in high-BMI recipient; (3) high-steatosis graft in normal-BMI recipient; and (4) low-steatosis graft in normal-BMI recipient. RESULTS:After adjustment for multiple factors, recipient high-BMI remained an independent predictor of posttransplant mortality at 30 days (P < 0.0001) and persisted at 1 year (P = 0.009). A high-steatosis graft was the strongest independent predictor of mortality at 30 days (hazard ratio 2.05, 1.66-2.53; P < 0.0001) and that effect was diminished but persistent at 1 year (1.27, 1.10-1.46; P = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS:Recipient high-BMI and a high-steatosis graft are both significant independent and equally powerful predictors of mortality after modern liver transplant. High-steatosis grafts transplanted into obese recipients have the highest mortality. The increase in mortality associated with a high-steatosis graft into a normal-BMI recipient is similar in magnitude to a low-steatosis graft placed into a high-BMI recipient.
PMID: 31577675
ISSN: 1534-6080
CID: 5168832

The impact of ABO blood type on the prevalence of portal vein thrombosis in patients with advanced chronic liver disease

Scheiner, Bernhard; Northup, Patrick G; Gruber, Anselm B; Semmler, Georg; Leitner, Gerda; Quehenberger, Peter; Thaler, Johannes; Ay, Cihan; Trauner, Michael; Reiberger, Thomas; Lisman, Ton; Mandorfer, Mattias
BACKGROUND AND AIMS:Non-O blood type (BT) is a risk factor for thromboses, which has been attributed to its effects on von Willebrand factor (VWF)/factor VIII (FVIII) levels. Although high VWF/FVIII may be risk factors for portal vein thrombosis (PVT) in patients with advanced chronic liver disease (ACLD), the impact of BT on PVT is unknown. We aimed to assess (I) whether non-O-BT is a risk factor for PVT and (II) whether non-O-BT impacts VWF/factor VIII in patients with ACLD. METHODS:Retrospective analysis comprising two cohorts: (I) "US" including all adult liver transplantations in the US in the MELD era and (II) "Vienna" comprising patients with a hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) ≥6 mmHg. RESULTS:(I) The "US cohort" included 84 947 patients (non-O: 55.43%). The prevalence of PVT at the time of listing (4.37% vs 4.56%; P = .1762) and at liver transplantation (9.56% vs 9.33%; P = .2546) was similar in patients with O- and non-O-BT. (II) 411 patients were included in the "Vienna cohort" (non-O: 64%). Mean HVPG was 18(9) mmHg and 90% had an HVPG ≥10 mmHg. Patients with non-O-BT had slightly increased VWF levels (318(164)% vs 309(176)%; P = .048; increase of 23.8%-23.9% in adjusted analyses), but this difference was driven by patients with less advanced disease. However, non-O-BT explained only 1% of the variation in VWF and had no effect on FVIII. CONCLUSIONS:Although non-O-BT impacts VWF in patients with early stage ACLD, its contribution to VWF variation is considerably smaller than in the general population. Moreover, non-O-BT had no impact on FVIII. These findings may explain the absence of an association between non-O-BT and PVT in patients with advanced cirrhosis.
PMID: 32052552
ISSN: 1478-3231
CID: 5168862

Development of a Model to Predict Portal Vein Thrombosis in Liver Transplant Candidates: The Portal Vein Thrombosis Risk Index

Gaballa, Daniel; Bezinover, Dmitri; Kadry, Zakiyah; Eyster, Elaine; Wang, Ming; Northup, Patrick G; Stine, Jonathan G
Portal vein thrombosis (PVT) is associated with inferior pretransplantation and posttransplantation outcomes. We aimed to create a predictive model to risk stratify transplant candidates for PVT. Data on adult transplants in the United States during the Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) era through September 2016 were reviewed. We constructed and validated a scoring system composed of routine, readily available clinical information to predict the development of incident PVT at 12 months from transplantation listing. A total of 66,568 liver transplant candidates were dichotomized into 2 groups to construct (n = 34,751) and validate (n = 31,817) a scoring system. In general, the derivation and validation cohorts were clinically similar. Although nonalcoholic steatohepatitis was a significant predictor of incident PVT (hazard ratio, 1.29; 95% confidence interval, 1.08-1.54; P < 0.001), age, MELD score, and moderate-to-severe ascites were also associated with increased risk. African American race was associated with decreased risk. A scoring system (PVT risk index [RI]) of these 5 variables had an area under the curve of 0.71 and 0.70 in both derivation and validation cohorts, respectively. By applying the low cutoff score of 2.6, incident PVT could be accurately excluded (negative predictive value 94%). Using the high cutoff score of 4.6 (positive predictive value 85%), PVT could be diagnosed with high accuracy. The PVT-RI predicts which candidates awaiting lifesaving liver transplantation will and will not develop future PVT. Although this scoring system will require prospective validation, it provides a powerful new tool for the clinician when risk stratifying cirrhosis patients prior to liver transplantation for future PVT development.
PMID: 31436367
ISSN: 1527-6473
CID: 5168822

Acute kidney injury is associated with low factor XIII in decompensated cirrhosis

Intagliata, Nicolas M; Davis, Jessica P E; Lafond, Jeffery; Erdbruegger, Uta; Greenberg, Charles S; Northup, Patrick G; Caldwell, Stephen H
BACKGROUND/AIMS:The coagulation system is known to be rebalanced but fragile in stable cirrhosis. Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common in these patients and associated with an increased bleeding risk. We aimed to assess coagulation parameters in this population. METHODS:We prospectively enrolled 43 hospitalized patients with decompensated cirrhosis with (n = 22) or without (n = 21) AKI. Coagulation factor levels, viscoelastic coagulation assay, and thrombin generation assay were performed and compared between these groups and a healthy reference group. RESULTS:Conventional markers of coagulation were not statistically different between patients with and without AKI. Factor XIII was significantly reduced in all patients with cirrhosis compared to healthy controls (p = <0.0001). In patients with AKI, factor XIII was significantly lower compared to patients without AKI (AKI 38% vs. non-AKI 60% p = 0.002). In patients with cirrhosis, factor XIII had a significantly positive correlation with EXTEM maximal clot firmness (r = 0.5440, p = 0.0002) and FIBTEM maximal clot firmness (r = 0.7397, p = <0.0001) and a negative correlation with EXTEM clot formation time (-0.413, p = 0.0065). CONCLUSIONS:Factor XIII was significantly reduced in decompensated cirrhosis patients with AKI compared to decompensated patients without AKI. These findings suggest that exacerbation of factor XIII deficiency in AKI in decompensated cirrhosis may affect bleeding risk and warrants further study.
PMID: 30967339
ISSN: 1878-3562
CID: 5168812

Inherited thrombophilia and portal vein thrombosis in cirrhosis: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Ma, Steven D; Wang, Jennifer; Bezinover, Dmitri; Kadry, Zakiyah; Northup, Patrick G; Stine, Jonathan G
Background/UNASSIGNED:Portal vein thrombosis (PVT) is common in cirrhosis. PVT is associated with high morbidity and mortality. Individual reports suggest that PVT occurs more frequently in patients with cirrhosis and inherited thrombophilia. The relationship between cirrhosis, PVT development, and inherited thrombophilia was explored in this study. The aim of the study was to determine whether cirrhotic patients with nontumoral PVT have an increased rate of inherited thrombophilia. Methods/UNASSIGNED:Studies were identified by searching electronic databases up to October 2017 with English language and human subject restrictions. Two independent reviewers screened citations and extracted data. Magnitude of effect was calculated to obtain aggregate estimates of effect size and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Between-study variability and heterogeneity were assessed. Results/UNASSIGNED: = 0.03) were significantly associated with PVT risk. Methyltetrahydrofolate reductase C677T mutation was not associated with increased PVT risk. No heterogeneity or publication bias was observed. One important study with opposite findings could not be included due to lack of primary data. Conclusions/UNASSIGNED:FVL and PTG20210A mutation were associated with increased PVT risk in patients with cirrhosis. This finding reframes the role of inherited thrombophilia in PVT development in patients with cirrhosis. Future prospective studies investigating screening for inherited thrombophilia in all cirrhosis patients with PVT seem warranted.
PMCID:6781918
PMID: 31624785
ISSN: 2475-0379
CID: 5168842